Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Mother, the mother. There's too many of you crying in.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
Oh naga niga. There's far too many of you dying in.
You know, we've got to find a way.
Speaker 3 (00:21):
To bring some love in here today.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
Father, father, we don't need to escalate. You see, war
is not the answer. War is not the answer for
only love can conquer hate or tolerability. You know, we've
got to find a way to bring some loven here today. Hey, father,
(01:00):
ha ha sister brother nigga ha ha ha niggas ha
ha ha whoa who it's harmonizing. I don't know what
(01:40):
the fuck because I hate it. Everybody.
Speaker 3 (01:55):
Welcome back to the Blackest Show about Nothing. Is Jada
nixteen at home? Yeah, we are here at my house
in Los Angeles. Uh huh so you get to see
my silver rights.
Speaker 1 (02:14):
Yeah, this is your kitchen. Yes, yes, yes, all about
all that. But yes we have a recording. Look at
us long time. Let me look at you know how
the white girls when they be oh, yeah, we have
the like, they'll be like, so, Ashley, tell me that
(02:38):
they hold the mics in real stupid ways, right, And
they be like, so tell me how you they hold
the miccor are drop white men I don't know how
they do stuff. I don't watch their romps. There's no need.
I've heard enough of them in hotels and okay, I'm
(02:58):
not doing this. I've heard enough hotels and apartment buildings
and things like that. I don't need to see it. No,
And I you know I cook chicken every week. So anyway,
happy post jun teeth. Yes, it is the day after
Negro Solstice.
Speaker 3 (03:16):
If you are black and queer, you know, we got
our superpowers this week?
Speaker 1 (03:21):
You did. Where's the bitch who said everybody was getting superpowers? Listen,
she knew too much.
Speaker 3 (03:36):
I'm just saying, notice everybody who has made those type
of proclamations, you know, Oh, let.
Speaker 1 (03:43):
Me shut up, Let me shut up, Let me shut up.
Every nigga is a star though, oh no they're not.
Every has an asterisk. Because let me tell you what
brought me joy this week. Our felony. We're just gonna
(04:04):
jump right in. Our felony was rushed to the hospital,
have the day you deserve, I know, so excited.
Speaker 3 (04:12):
Apparently he's clodding in the leg and overdosed on some
drug ASTs in prison. But of course, and true, nobody
wants to work anymore. He's still alive.
Speaker 1 (04:27):
Well good, No, he should be alive. No, I want
you to feel. I want you to feel that heat
rise in that leg. I want you to feel the
inflammation build. Watch that bitch grow like suffer. You don't
get to you don't get to take the easy way
out and die. That's fair. You don't get to take
the easy way. I want you to sit. But the
(04:48):
problem with him is he's not sitting with his sins.
So if you're not gonna sit with your sins, if
you're not going to reflect, then suffer. Yeah, I hear you.
Speaker 3 (04:59):
But I also you know Big Red could do way
more worse than we can, So you know, I mean, mmm,
you know we could expedite that.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
Process the bad placed. Hey girl, they say this is
a big red town. What if that plays on a
loop in Hell?
Speaker 3 (05:24):
Okay, so I have a I have to tell you
about power since we're here and together. The best part
of that show is the theme song. Yeah, and I
wouldn't mind playing that.
Speaker 1 (05:40):
Yeah, I'll just confront the post pond right light, city Light.
Speaker 3 (05:47):
I gotta make this.
Speaker 1 (05:48):
Is But the rest of the show, if you just
put power on in Hell, Yeah, that works for me. Honestly,
it is a bad show. Totally, it is very bad.
(06:10):
There was not enough chatter like around the fact that
he almost killed his toddler cheating with a key chain
from the Museum of Natural History. There's not enough chatter
about that.
Speaker 3 (06:21):
Yeah, and you know, to your point about having mediocre
black shit on TV, which is important because we can
you know, even the most mediocre shit we can do
will still outsell and be better than anything that they
do on their best I still watch BMF. It's a
terrible show. Yeah, it just looks nice. That was my
(06:42):
issue with Power And.
Speaker 1 (06:43):
I really don't want to say this out loud. I mean, yeah,
show what I personally believe that Big Meat is probably
a horrible human being. But I watched the show and
I love how niggas you know, are like, I'm going
to fantasize and romanticize my drugs, you know, excursions and experience.
(07:11):
Can we have a chat aw about resume?
Speaker 3 (07:13):
So I was on the two B and the reason
why I was on to be was because I was
trying to find old episodes of Project rue Way because
I'm trying to get to the clear version of Stantino.
I think we've still we showed it on the show
on the Patreon, but I was trying to get a
real clear version.
Speaker 1 (07:35):
Is he one season? That's right? You did say that?
Or he didn't win he came runner up.
Speaker 3 (07:40):
But I happen to go in the Negro Cinema section
just to see, you know what, can I catch up
on whatever if Lisa ray McCoy has some new thing?
Speaker 4 (07:49):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (07:50):
I looked.
Speaker 3 (07:51):
Most of those shows and programs are all the same,
like BMF type, So why can't we have a black romance?
What happened to like a gen z love and basketball?
Even though I hate.
Speaker 1 (08:06):
Hello, brocka Kill just made a show I'm not talking
about from studio. I mean from like the two B community,
Niggas Don't Love Anymore. AI is contributing to deeting the
insides niggas don't love anymore. That's not true. No, there
(08:27):
are certain certified lovers out there. No, they're just which
is another conversation.
Speaker 3 (08:33):
But like Chris and I were talking about, like even music, right,
and I hate to be like, well, most of this
show is get off my lawn content. Yeah, but like
we was all so we're watching the bet situation, the millennial.
Speaker 1 (08:49):
Yeah, but not even the pre show thing and that's all.
That's jen Alf and I can't even say that's gen
z oh. I know.
Speaker 3 (08:57):
Although they did have the Ying Ying Twins perform and
that was very interesting. But remind me to put talk
by that a second.
Speaker 1 (09:03):
Well, I was about to do something and I can't
do that. Well what, well you're here now, Oh not sure?
Speaker 4 (09:14):
You have to okay, black screen? Okay, okay, okay, Well
no you don't have to edit that up.
Speaker 3 (09:26):
No, you added that up just because of the story
and it's a quick one. So you know how oftentimes
like you forget, things happen to people.
Speaker 1 (09:34):
Yeah, So like I was on like the Girl with
the Thumb you brought up the other.
Speaker 3 (09:38):
Day exactly, but I was on Instagram and I was,
you know, Comic Con is the thing in summertime or whatever,
the divas are out or whatever. I totally forgot the
Black Power Rangers missing fingers, Zach go look and if
you so you didn't know if you go back and
(09:59):
want how strategic they hit his hand. So I was
reminded of this the other day when I was on
Instagram and I was like, oh, yeah, I forgot mm hmm,
no hand. Oh oh shit, mhm.
Speaker 1 (10:24):
This he okay, you remember hold on before I get
into this, do you remember I told you that we
had a project in elementary school and it was about fearce.
At this point, now I'm like, why did they make
us do this? But you know you so, you know,
(10:45):
people were making cotton ball snakes and you know, felt
spiders and things like that, phobias and so and so forth.
Mine was getting shot in a drive by because I
watched a lot of Hughes brother in John single to
movies with my father. I swear to God, right, So
the teacher was like, girl, I cannot we cannot go
(11:07):
on with this presentation anyway. I just wanted to preface
that book and says oh Walter. Emmanuel Jones, who played
the original Black Ranger Zach Taylor and Mighty Morphin's Power Rangers,
is missing his middle finger on his left hand. He
lost it in a childhood firearm accident at the age
of four. Despite this, he was able to perform his
(11:29):
stunts and fight sequences in the show, often with the
help of clever camera angles and editing images. WHOA, I'm
sorry no, because this is depicted when I've clicked images. Yeah,
(11:53):
it's like a lobster claw. I know she's not alive.
Had oh oh drinking the juice. Oh that's crazy. But
see it's not as thumbs though, See, because you can
operate with no middle finger. Like you just look boo,
no thumbs, nigga, No thumbs are big toes. You can't.
(12:16):
I wish that on my worst enemies. Get imagine having
a bionic thumb.
Speaker 3 (12:21):
Like you see like whole like animatronic hands and things
and like legs and stuff, but you never see like filangies,
not unlike some eye robot shit.
Speaker 1 (12:30):
Yeah, you do hand the whole hand. You've seen a
whole hand, yes, but I mean like, oh, like a finger,
just a finger.
Speaker 3 (12:35):
Just if he was say, for example, he was born
without a thumb, right, there was like some birth effect,
and but you've never seen somebody like, hey we've we
have new thumb technologies.
Speaker 1 (12:46):
Well that's because, if I'm to be honest with you,
like the filangies are God's outside children. And I'm gonna
tell you why. Because notice, how like if you break
your toe, no matter how much medical experience out there,
it'd be like, yeah, you're don't have to just keep that.
Speaker 3 (13:02):
Still what I said, yeah, I will.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
Put a stint on it, but like we can't really
like like your fingers are your toes, your fulangies are
your or our gods outside children. Yeah, we should pay
some bills. We should.
Speaker 3 (13:23):
Hey, everybody, tell a friend, Tell a friend, tell a
friend that we are here every Friday, whether it's reruns
or not.
Speaker 1 (13:35):
You niggers are not too good for reruns. Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 3 (13:38):
You know, Jada next to you has enough content to
be in syndication. Yeah, So with that being said, sign
up to our Patreon. It's nine ninety nine or twelve
ninety nine, whichever you choose. One is the love offering,
one is the real deal. We have a bunch of
content on there. Never Ever Met, which is a doozy
(13:58):
of a show. We have a whole bunch of stuff
on there.
Speaker 1 (14:03):
So she really barely reacted to that baby. She said, Okay,
I said that baby, that bitch put her leg on you.
Speaker 3 (14:12):
Yeah, and we have more to discuss about that because
the agents have done their big thing and in research,
because it seems like the production over our own doesn't
know how to do such.
Speaker 1 (14:27):
So Ope, I don't know what the fuck is going on.
Speaker 3 (14:29):
Right, She's its name only. Yeah, she out with Gail frolicking.
But any who also join our YouTube channel. There's going
to be some changes on the YouTube channel, so you'll
see a lot more us, you know, in the short
(14:50):
section and all that stuff. So please subscribe to us
as freer than you and me. And also, I know
this is a big ass, but social the social algorithm sucks.
So if you can go on Jada NeXT's socials either
(15:10):
Blue Sky because we're not on Twitter anymore because I
don't believe in state sponsored social media, but we could
also but you can find us on the meta Instagram
or the Tiki Talk. But yeah, just go and like
and stuff and interact because that would really help the show,
(15:32):
especially on YouTube as well. Like commonn subscribe, hit that
notification bill wherever you are. I think that's it for now.
We'll talk about the week and do special shout outs
and stuff. But let's take a break and we'll be
back with more Jada XD.
Speaker 1 (15:49):
At home head it Claude do a Keith Haring post
after these messages will be right back.
Speaker 5 (16:00):
Baywatch all American boy clad customers in a life of
beautiful jewelry sticks or claws, and just like maybe you
see if from foundline does with the sun folg after
his superboard, not his body. They say, you trying to
smuggle diamonds inside one of my boards. But this deal
has a twenty four kr of flaws, like so she
said this time, I'm sorry, had to get him middle.
Is this the end of summer on bay Watch.
Speaker 3 (16:23):
And we're black we're catching up today here at my house.
Jade's here as you can see it. If not, then
you are you need to join the page.
Speaker 1 (16:34):
Yeah, we're going to war. Yeah, I know.
Speaker 3 (16:43):
I mean, I don't want to say no, Shade, but
I kind of saw this covering and not because of
like of the current regime.
Speaker 1 (16:58):
I think it's because it's time for America. Well, I
don't know if I can say that. I think we're
at the end. We're at our series finale. Every empire
has all we're at.
Speaker 3 (17:09):
We're at the episodes directed by Elizabeth Moss or you
know what I mean, Like we are at the end.
We're gearing up for the sequel, Yeah to the Headmaid's Tale,
you know what I mean?
Speaker 1 (17:21):
Like I.
Speaker 3 (17:23):
Every empire must fall, it has to. It's just and
you know the revolution will be. It sucks, but live
stream absolutely. I so, so.
Speaker 1 (17:40):
Yeah, you all already know everything that we've been talking
about Gaza for years now, which is disgusting, and you
know Iran is also involved at this point, Yemen's been involved,
and you can't be mad at people for saying we're
sick of this. We also have a narcissistic like truly
(18:04):
not even in a loose sense of the word that
everybody uses it in We have a narcissistic, insane regime
and president who wants this, so you know, he wanted
he will he wanted this, He willed this, He wants
this under his name, he wants this under his administration.
(18:26):
I was a president who went to war, which is
so because they want to be some war commander respect
they want to be in the history books and all
of that. Also, on the on a local front, we
already know everything that's going on with immigration, the way
that ICE is illegally because whether they're backed by the
(18:48):
legal system or not, it is still illegal based off
of what y'all set up and said initially, Uh, they
are legally kidnapping and snatching people up, terrorizing families, terrorizing birthdays,
terrorizing graduations, terrorizing family businesses, and everything that makes this
(19:09):
country what it is, even though all of this was
founded on atrocities and theft, death, kidnapping, murder, pillaging, and
everything else. But it's just really disheartening to see even
being here and noticing where all all of the local
(19:30):
businesses would be lined up initially are now boarded up.
People are hiding to try to keep safe. It's like fear.
They are instilling fear into folks, which is no way
to live. And I don't even know what to tell
(19:50):
you what to do. Just make sure you Yeah, I
can't tell you to know your rights. I can't tell
I don't know what to tell you to do. We
just need to stay stay, stay aware.
Speaker 3 (20:00):
What's the point of knowing our rights when they're when
they're not respected?
Speaker 1 (20:03):
Yeah, just violated. We want to wish. I don't know how.
Adriana Smith in Georgia, the nurse who was on life
support all of this time m HM because of abortion
rights in Roe V. Wade, has passed away and she
(20:29):
deserves an easeful journey after.
Speaker 3 (20:33):
Being held against her will. Essentially, Yeah, if you didn't
know this, this black woman was kept alive. She was
brain dead for the majority of her pregnancy. They kept
her alive, to keep the baby alive so that she
can give birth.
Speaker 1 (20:52):
For weeks.
Speaker 3 (20:55):
Because of whatever religious whatever zelts have voted for anti or.
Speaker 1 (21:00):
Religious and yeah, and it sucks because it's like, I
know this won't.
Speaker 3 (21:07):
Be the first time, absolutely not, And because you know,
unfortunately black women are always disrespected or are the un
less than total pull in the medical sciences and everything.
And it's wild because you know, MAGA makes a point
of you know, like we need to replenish birth and
(21:29):
all this stuff, but you're killing us at the same time.
Speaker 1 (21:32):
Because they don't actually care about people. They don't actually
care about the bottom line, the true foundation of what
the humanity really means. It's all about it's all about
the dollar proving their moot points. But I'm always like,
there's so white people are so counterproductive because it's like
they really are. Like, if you're trying to affect it, right,
if you're trying to.
Speaker 3 (21:53):
Upload the cycle of capitalism, which I don't agree with,
but I get it right because that's what America is
based on, then you would think that you would do
everything in your power to ensure that birth rates are
high so that we can fall into this.
Speaker 6 (22:08):
You know, America's great, and you know, like, if you're
going to brainwash people into your crooked system to begin with,
then do it in a way that's going to be effected.
Speaker 1 (22:19):
Give it hello. It's like, you know what, let's let
them buy houses like the nineties and you know, shop
from their ice cream trucks and go to McDonald's. Let's
not poison the food. Because if they are relatively healthy
and continue to birth babies because they can actually raise them,
(22:40):
then we will just continue to pour into our sousu pot.
But see, they know, they're like, you know what, kill
the ball, but keep the babies. And if they're not
having the babies, we're gonna make them have the babies,
but we're not going to give them the conditions to
raise the babies in a productive way so that we
can continue you to make the babies that we need
(23:01):
for our system. Like y'all not even working to your
own crooked, horrible advantage. I want like like it's like
turn it on, you know what I mean. It's because
it's all about hate, That's what it's really. It's about hate.
It's about supremacy. Get hate. But I.
Speaker 3 (23:22):
Can hate and also not work out of my best
interests either right, like there is that.
Speaker 1 (23:29):
There is that like I can have all that.
Speaker 3 (23:32):
Y'all don't know if I don't fuck with this nigga
or not. There's you know what I mean, there's there's
ways to express your your prejudice or whatever the fuck
racist or not. However, not at the expense of but.
Speaker 1 (23:52):
When you cut your nose off to spite your face, dude,
they're like, I'm gonna skin my face to spite my toes.
That's so nuts. Oh, it's insane. But that's enough news
for now. We just had to do a quick update.
Speaker 3 (24:08):
Yes, because we haven't we've last week was crazy. We
haven't recorded row episode. We knew well, I knew that,
James coming here, because let's recap our weeks this week.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
My god, speaking of nuttiness, I was taking to Know
to school last week. I was gonna tell you then.
So the Trump House, I tell you what, the giant
flag we pass every day now also has a Pride flag.
(24:42):
So it's a Trump flag and a Pride flag, like,
and they have it on the stand, the one that
goes like this so that it shoots up from the house.
Speaker 3 (24:50):
That's like this meme and I'm about to show it
to you, but I'm gonna spend it.
Speaker 1 (24:56):
That's giving very much. These faggots are my friend, you
know what I mean? Or my dad. You know how
my dad is like problematic and unintentionally Yep, he'd be
like he's so not he was a sweetie, but he
was a sweetie pie jade, and I'm like, you can't
describe people like that. Oh.
Speaker 3 (25:15):
My mother and grandmother used to say sweeter than July
jam to discuss because my grandmother.
Speaker 1 (25:21):
Fun story, So my grandmother.
Speaker 3 (25:26):
I always say my mother a little more more phobic
than my grandmother was because my grandmother had a gay
friend named mister Hartley. Okay, mister Hartley passed away from
complications and you can figure out why what that was.
It was early nineties, so that sets the top. But
she was her church friend, and I should have known
(25:47):
about gay shit back in the day because he used
to come to church in like like gold like he
was like it was flashy, but the whole suit. Yeah okay,
But the most important thing that I remember was mister
Hartley's bible case. Everything I had never seen like designer
(26:09):
bible cases before growing up.
Speaker 1 (26:12):
So he took like a Louis Vuitton purse. Yeah, and
made a Bible cover out of it. Like that's innovation
because now phones and iPads and I got all these
skins and shit. He was ahead of his time.
Speaker 3 (26:27):
Yeah, and I remember he made my grandmother one what
was his name, mister Hartley. I don't remember his first name, but.
Speaker 1 (26:32):
Uncle Hartley made my bible that Hartley. And my grandmother
always be like, he's sweeter than July jamp and that's
my friend.
Speaker 7 (26:40):
I'd be like, yeah, the butt is crazy, but the butt,
the butt is great. Never you know, no, but it's great.
Speaker 1 (26:55):
What if I x D he's sweetered in a bomb pop?
But baby, I love him anyway? Like what but AnyWho,
I did.
Speaker 5 (27:14):
Well.
Speaker 1 (27:15):
First of all, we got to address the elephant in
the room first. I keep forgetting to do that. Apologies
to anybody who purchased tickets to Getting Grown Live LA
on juneteenth. We do have a rescheduled date immediately because
you know we are not trying to play you. Uh
you know, everybody, give Kia your well wishes. She caught COVID,
(27:38):
which shows you it's still running around. Yes, new strain,
New strain just dropped. It's called nimbuss. It is a new.
Speaker 3 (27:48):
Variant straight out of Wuhan, and it has struck in
American soil. As our dearest has gotten it.
Speaker 1 (27:57):
Hm. Yes, yeah, she got the COVID and the bronchitis.
Speaker 3 (28:01):
It's called what nimbus like the cloud? Oh you also
see this in person. There might be a look look
at the screen or look at the window.
Speaker 1 (28:10):
Oh that's not that's a Is that a car chase
or no, it's not a car chase. That's them terrorizing
the streets. Okay, that's the police terrorizing the streets.
Speaker 8 (28:25):
One Tonight's Health Watch Report. If you feel like you've
got a razor blade stuck in your throat, it might
not be allergies. A new COVID variant nicknamed nimbus is
spreading and one of its most telling symptoms is a severe,
unmistakable sore throat nimbus.
Speaker 1 (28:41):
Well, yes, Kia got it, and she's sick and she
has bronchitis too, so you all give her well wishes.
But we do have a reschedule. August eighth, we will
be here. It'll be a Friday at the Walk good Yard,
and we're going to have music and we have live
show exclusive merch and all kinds of just like fun
(29:02):
things planned for you all. So make sure you come through.
If you weren't going to be able to make the
original date, then come through August eighth. I'm sure. I
think I feel like the spirit said, no, y'all not
doing this on Juneteenth. It's just not happening. Yes, niggas
deserve to rest. And also we have to continue to
acknowledge our brothers and sisters and ancestors specifically from Galveston, Texas,
(29:26):
who are the ones who were directly affected by Juneteenth.
You all know. I for the Black Kitchen series, I
interviewed Amethyst Ganaway, chef Amethyst out of Charleston, South Carolina,
and she put up a really beautiful Juneteenth post. The
sentiment was perfect. Actually, she honored the ancestors of Galveston, Texas.
(29:49):
She acknowledged why we as a people, like as a people,
want to celebrate Juneteenth, but also to keep in mind
where the origins came from, and so we want to
make sure that we do that every single year here.
You know, it's not a Martin Luther King fat where.
You know, you got a bitch on a car and
a flyer and some purple haze in the background. You
(30:14):
know what I'm saying, you know, and it's nothing wrong
with niggas gathering, but and and honoring and also wanting
to celebrate, and you know, because it was the day
that supposedly we got free wave free. But we do,
like I said, want to always keep the origins in mind.
But we also want to send Kia our love and
(30:36):
our well wishes. And I hope to see you all
in the building at the Walk Goodyard on August eighth
here in Los Angeles. But yeah, the dinner, oh yes,
Sunday on a Monday, Sunday on a Monday. Shout out
to x D for being my employee. Shout out to
(30:59):
Shout out to the kitchen finessa Oni Akpa, who was
my sue, my right hand. She's just phenomenal. Her food
is phenomenal and she was a phenomenal sue, a great
partner in the kitchen. Yeah, only can go anywhere with
me like Oni is a boss, a beast, a professon
(31:21):
like I love her and I'm so grateful for her.
Shout out to Mary, who was running from hither to
thither to make sure that we had doing a dinner
in a city where you don't have a team behind
you in a restaurant and commercial uh equipment and all
of those things, and you have to like build a
kitchen essentially is no easy feat. But shout out to
(31:44):
y'all and shout out to everybody who came through and
supported and had a good time and got full. I
hope you all felt felt fooling your bellies and your spirits.
I hope your flavor palette was jumping and jump in ladies,
leave your man at home, all of that shit.
Speaker 7 (32:03):
Like.
Speaker 1 (32:03):
I wanted to make sure that it was a community
experience and also that it tastes good. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Shout out to Chris RS for taking Shout out to
Chris Rogers, yes, for the photography and almost dying in
the midst of it.
Speaker 9 (32:19):
Yeah, the crash and a mountain mic. Yes, I'm not
gonna be putting all your stuff out there, but shout
out to you for being a raised black man.
Speaker 1 (32:30):
Okay, a raised black man. He stuck around. He said,
can I help you put the chairs up? I said,
you know what, on any other terms, I would say no,
because I don't want anybody who purchased tickets to do
any work, but it was that was so that was
lovely and it was immediately like you were I know
exactly who you were raised by, I know what your
(32:52):
household is like, and I appreciate every aspect of it. Yeah,
it was.
Speaker 3 (32:57):
It was a really nice turnout. Friend agents that came,
we had a little link up. It was nice connecting
with you all in person, very lovely. You know, it
almost felt like a JA nextd Live event. I mean,
I don't want to.
Speaker 1 (33:14):
Take away from you, but no, like you know, you
got to you got to fellowship and mingle for me.
Speaker 6 (33:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (33:19):
And that was the food.
Speaker 3 (33:22):
So the food you all missed. I'm not even gonna
hold you. And you know, like we all say, Jacob Cook,
yeah yeah, yeah, yeah yeah. But there was something very
special about this meal. And I don't know if it
was because it was very negro, yeah, but it was
it was like legit tasty, like it was just like
(33:44):
seconds people were kind of you know, like scrambling for more.
Like I was reading the discord. Mary was supplying what
they called the Nigga balls that she made, the fritters,
and there was just nicking them off the so you know,
the little excess.
Speaker 1 (34:03):
Yeah, it was it was great. Everybody was well fed.
I love the fact that everybody acted right. Let me
tell you, let me tell you one and two things.
Niggas don't come to our events acting up, and I'm
so grateful for it.
Speaker 3 (34:19):
You gotta be honest. There have been other live events
that I've been to and y'all act up. Not necessarily
you hit dog, holler high lassie, but you know, and
you all been to some where niggas act.
Speaker 1 (34:31):
Up absolutely absolutely absolutely not in my house. Not in
my house. I'll put you out. I'll put you out.
But no, you all don't even bring that type of energy.
It's always actually a very lovely like community, communal energy,
which is something that we need. It's necessary. I noticed
(34:52):
here in La y'all need this. Yeah, y'all got to
be intentional about these these negro gatherings. And it doesn't
have to be like a whole to do just you
know what I'm saying.
Speaker 3 (35:02):
Like pull up, Like yeah, there's so many of us
who live in like communities, and it's kind of like
the argument I had when I first moved to New
York and it was like, you know, a lot of
people don't have like in New York the space to
host some things. So that's what we're outside a lot
right at bars? Yeah yeah, yeah, sure is the inverse.
(35:25):
A lot of us live in apartment communities, so why
not have game nights or have something at your own
houses one or two. You know, it doesn't have to
be a holy event like you had, but it could
just be like a group of people, even strangers that
you don't have. You know, I'm not like strangers strangers,
but you know what I mean. Yeah, Like it doesn't
always have to be your down home girls or whatever
(35:48):
the fuck. Like, it could be some new people and
it doesn't have to be a whole big ordeal.
Speaker 1 (35:52):
That's my favorite thing. At the dinner. At one of
the tables, people buy solo tickets often, like it's not
a lot of people coming in pairs. There's some, but
there's not a lot of people. And one table was
like none of us knew each other. We all came
alone and they and they were like and we are,
like we are so cool now, and they went for
(36:12):
a cousin walk. Yeah. Yeah, it was very communal. It
was a good time. Yeah, So that's that's kind of
I'm trying to bring your auntie's house elevated to. That's
the experience that I'm trying to take. So if you'd
like to sponsor, yes, uh, not just Sunday on a Monday,
(36:35):
but you know, just the dinner party series in general.
I am looking for you know, food sponsors and alcohol
sponsors and and and look yeah, yeah fly I feed
people well and I have a great team. So definitely
(36:56):
looking to do that to bring this to more cities
for sure. Yeah, yeah, it was good. It was a
good time.
Speaker 3 (37:03):
Maybe I'll just call it your Auntie's house. Okay, I
don't know. I like Sunday on a Monday, but I
know that not everything can be on a Monday.
Speaker 1 (37:12):
Rights, although I could still just whatever. I don't know,
I call for you on a Monday. Niggas came out
on a Monday, on a Monday, and it didn't even
feel like That's another reason I kind of like doing
it on Mondays. I think I might keep it Sunday
on a Monday, for Yeah, I think I might keep
(37:32):
it that.
Speaker 3 (37:33):
Actually, you know, I think about people who had hard
days on Monday, Like, for example, have you ever seen
Bronx Gothic?
Speaker 1 (37:43):
No, but I've heard of it.
Speaker 3 (37:44):
It is a intense artsy film. You know what's that
jay Z video with the black woman is dancing at
the Louver. I forget her name. She's an iconic dancer, yes,
but I'm trying to remember. I'm trying to think of
this song. Well, Bronx Gothic is about her life. Oh
a woman's show.
Speaker 1 (38:06):
The Bronx Gothic feels so deeply personal. I felt like
this little girl again, I love yourself as a brown girl.
You really got to do the work.
Speaker 3 (38:20):
And so in the beginning of her show, it's a
very long show that she does. In the beginning of
her show, she's just dancing with her back face towards
the audience for like forty five minutes, and they're like,
what the fuck are you doing? Like I pay for
you to, you know, do this and perform for us.
And her idea is that you just got off the train.
You're not trying to focus on me and the work.
(38:41):
You're trying to calm down from getting off the a train.
You're trying to get yourself together. So by the time
you're confused about why I'm standing here, that means you're
finally focused on me.
Speaker 1 (38:52):
And then she turns around about per hour and then performs.
Speaker 3 (38:55):
I thought that was very interesting because her idea was
the fact that you know, mondays are like week days
are hardy New York City just in general. So yeah,
you have something to look forward to at the end
of a busy getting yourself.
Speaker 1 (39:08):
You know, back in the group of things. I think
that's important. It is no, it is and white, like
we were talking about yesterday. Also our attention spans and
like being intentional about focusing and all of those things
like that is important. That is extremely important. That's also
part of our conversation at the live shows. But AnyWho,
(39:30):
how was your week? WHOA for the last couple of weeks.
Speaker 3 (39:38):
Work filled? I What has happened to me? Oh, I
don't know if I told you all. See Roger bought
a purchased a vehicle.
Speaker 1 (39:51):
Yes he did. Pomp has been running us around.
Speaker 3 (39:56):
So that's been interesting. What else happened to me in
the last couple of weeks? Mom My life has been
very like ever since I came back from Sacramento. I've
been trying to like do because that was such an moment.
Speaker 1 (40:13):
You need to decompress. But yeah, I haven't like the
only thing that I've hung out with Jiminica and what
else did I do? Yeah, I haven't really been. I
haven't really been doing much. Just working. I have clients
and stuff you want to hire me to come on,
and but other than that, it's hot, it's getting there.
(40:37):
So I've just been in that. And the fact that
they say every summer we have is going to be
the coolest summer we ever have again is insane.
Speaker 3 (40:45):
Oh yeah, because I'm sure there's going to be one
moment where we're going to be it's going to be
one hundred and one degrees and be.
Speaker 1 (40:51):
Like, oh, I need a sweater. That's insane. I thought
that we grew up with like one hundred degrees summers,
but if they weren't as frequent, it would be a
historic heat wave.
Speaker 3 (41:07):
I remember when people used to read the newspapers, or
when people used to read back in the old country,
there was a thing called reading and newspapers and it
used to come out twice a day. But I remember
like growing up, when it was a heat wave it
would take over the news thing, and that it was
so irregular.
Speaker 1 (41:28):
Now it's two weeks spans of one hundred degree weather.
You know, when summer weather turns deadly. I could not
believe that heat would kill like that. Twenty years later,
Tom Skilding remembers the worst heat wave in Chicago history, or.
Speaker 3 (41:43):
Death to many of the other natural disasters.
Speaker 1 (41:46):
Combined Monday on WGN News at nine. And all I
ever think is like, oh, beach, I und even do
that because oh yeah, y'all got toxins in the sand.
Speaker 3 (41:58):
Our sneaking ship just becau because of the wildfires. And
it's not because people are dumping. It's just because it
flew into the beat.
Speaker 1 (42:05):
If we read all this shit in a book right now,
it had to you know how, Like when you read,
you have to paint the picture and you have to
illustrate the picture in your head. That's how we exercise
our imaginations. Hello. Speaking of which, I'll get back to
my point in a second. Tristan actually said, you know,
(42:26):
it's summer vacation or it's about to start. And Tristan
told Noah, he was like, all right, listen, I want
you to enjoy your summer. I want you to enjoy
your summer. But every morning, whenever you get up, I'm
not making you set no alarm or anything, but every morning,
(42:47):
when you get up, you're gonna go to the bathroom,
you're gonna brush your teeth, you're gonna wash your face,
you're gonna pee, and you're gonna come and you're gonna
read at least two chapters of a book every you're
gonna start the day, and then from you're not gonna
start off with the iPad and the phone and the
I appreciate that.
Speaker 3 (43:04):
Yeah, it's not as stringent as I was growing up,
because it was if I was enrolled in summer school
for enrichment, it was I was at home reading.
Speaker 1 (43:18):
You know, I've worked since I was eleven, not to
go nineteen forty three or yo, but jade with mine.
You know, I come home cold, soot on my face,
shoes flapping. I did, But I worked, so I was
always so summer was like the days I worked, and
in the days I didn't, you know, I watched music
(43:40):
videos and.
Speaker 3 (43:41):
May get a drive until like high school, and even
then I was a lifeguard at the y and so
I was watching.
Speaker 1 (43:48):
That's like some real like you like a free form
Disney show show like I was a camp counselor. I
was a lifeguard, yes.
Speaker 3 (44:00):
But it was through a black program. They were looking
for like black people who swam okay east side Sant Jose.
They wanted people to like have people that look like
them at the y. So there was nobody when I.
Speaker 1 (44:19):
Worked at they. I don't think the only white person
that worked there was the director. Hmm.
Speaker 3 (44:25):
Everybody like was either Filipino or Mexican or at that
time black.
Speaker 1 (44:34):
Did I ever tell you We've been recording this for
eleven years, so I've repeated a lot of shit. Did
I ever tell you about the time I had to
save a little girl? No, but remind us you did.
So you know, my parents finally got the opportunity when
their kids are damn near grown to buy a house. Moved,
(44:54):
bought a house. MoMA didn't find myma didn't buy on
until she was sixty, had a pool. It was a
old house, but you know, my father gutted the whole thing,
cleaned it out, did all the things. Right. So they're
having like a weekend thing. Right, it's a bunch of
family from New Orleans. I'm visiting them like it's a
whole thing. So I'm going to a party that night.
(45:19):
And at the time I was still getting a doobie,
So I'm going to get a dobe, you know what
I'm saying. I was like, I'm out of time going
to a party. My parents are doing a bunch of shit,
like you know, it was fun. So go get my
hair done. Go to their house and they have people
there and they're grilling and kids are swimming, you know,
(45:40):
all the stuff. And my grandfather's sitting as well. They're
visiting as well. So here're sitting as well. And my
grandfather can't swim. He's Mexican. Baby can't swear. For me,
I can say it because so he's sitting and I
(46:03):
come out and I give him a hug, and you know,
give family hug, greet everybody, and my grandfather goes you
that little girl right there, he was like, she's doing
a lot out there. And so I look, he was like, hmm,
somebody might want to go check on that. And I look,
(46:23):
is this the one that walks in the pool that
you were talking about the other day I've ever met? No? No, no, no, no,
this is for real. I was just talking about you.
Grandfather is the one that walks on the No, this
is the other one. No, that's the other one that
was the black wood. So so he's like hmm, she's
doing a lot you might want to. And I look
(46:43):
and I was like, are they I thought the kids
were playing like you know, going to hoo, can hold
their breath the longest, and I'm and then I really,
I'm like, that girl is not coming up. I have
on clothes, I got my hair done, just fresh doobie
on clothes, nigga, And the pool was ten feet. Why
(47:03):
would why the way over there? Because they could swim.
They've been swimming the whole time. So I jump in
the pool all the clothes and clothes and water is heavy, horrible,
So I jump in the pool and I have to
(47:35):
go down. She's sinking down to the bottom of the
ten feet So I have to go down to the
ten feet with clothes on, grab this little girl, swim up,
pull her out. We pull her out the pool. Layer
on the ground, du cpr all of that while everybody
calls nine to one one. So come to find out,
she had a seizure in the water. She had, so
(47:58):
that's what happened. She had a seizure in the water
and ended up. So that's why she never came back up.
But Nigga, I had to save a like an eleven
year old child. I think I was like twenty one.
I had to save an eleven year old child. It
went all of my clothes out of a pool. And
(48:19):
it was all because my grandfather was just sitting there
and was like, I think something might be a miss.
Speaker 3 (48:25):
I've been shout out to him for actually saying something,
because the little person could have died.
Speaker 1 (48:29):
Yeah. Absolutely, I'm glad you paid attention to it. See,
I never had any emergencies. I was always like.
Speaker 3 (48:37):
I had to tell children not to run all the time. O.
Kids love to run in general. Sure, they love to
especially run around a.
Speaker 1 (48:48):
Pool, and they love to run it in opportune times
and places.
Speaker 3 (48:52):
Where it'll be like a sharp object here where they
nearly you know, miss something that'll help their eye out.
Speaker 1 (49:01):
Do you have like crazy intrusive thoughts?
Speaker 3 (49:06):
Oh yeah, the other day, like what I when we
had to go on the balcony and I was putting
the tables up, and I was like, what if I.
Speaker 1 (49:18):
Just threw this table. No, I'm gonna tell you these
are dark, but I don't want this to happen. But
this is just what comes to my mind. And be honest,
So toddlers and little kids they and parents who let
their kids run ahead of them near the street. I
want to kick those bitches in the back. But these
(49:40):
kids run and they get right to the edge of
the crosswalk and then they stop, and I'm like, oh
my god, because some of these niggas be cutting the
corners too close when they turn. Oh. So then I
just think about all of them running to the street
get hit like Regina George. Every time that's what comes
to my head. I can't even help it. And then
every time I hold the baby because I love babies.
(50:02):
I love but every time I hold a baby, I
think about dropping the baby and they bust like a
watermelon every single time, and I hate it. I don't
even like want to think that, and it just no,
it's it's horrible. Why would you think that. I don't know.
(50:24):
Maybe I'm in hell, and this is why, this is
why I don't know why I would think that. I
don't want that to happen. I don't want to do either.
All of the psychotherapists or whoever the lists, they're like, Okay,
we've got to assession. That's what comes to my head.
Doctor joyb she'd be deep sighing at me. We have
(50:49):
a we love each other. But she'd be deep sigyhing
at me and I understand why. Yeah, I get it. Yeah,
I'm a little My whole family is. I just told you.
My grandfather sat there and watched the child drown and said,
she's doing a lot in there. You might want to
it's my My family is dead, fucking dead. Pin. Everybody's
(51:10):
just like, I think she's dying, and what can you do? Oh?
I think they're dying over there. I told you when
I rolled out of my father's truck, he was like,
a shake it off. And you were the first child.
(51:35):
I was the first child as well. I am, I
am yours? Do what to do? Yeah? My father said, oh,
in the projects, you rolled down you know the steps
of concrete, you just rolled I rolled up the car,
I rolled down the stairs a little somber salteak. I'm
(52:02):
like a fucking sonic the Hedgehog in the worst way.
Let's take a break.
Speaker 3 (52:08):
Yeah, and we'll be back with more Jada nextd at
home hit a Claude.
Speaker 1 (52:14):
After these messages, will be right back w Bro.
Speaker 5 (52:21):
The actor is never that far from who they are.
So if I'm not literally murdering, I have the propensity
to have become that. That's a few good opportunities in life. See,
let's just father being in my life. To say here
about it, that goes against what I think, right, because
I think you are a phenomenal actor and me knowing
you in real life, I said this, guys, so deep.
Speaker 1 (52:37):
This guy is and we're black. Uh, we're here.
Speaker 3 (52:49):
I was telling Jada of all jades. You know, remember
I was supposed to start my power journey.
Speaker 1 (52:55):
Yeah, so I did. Mm hmm. I did not finish.
How far did you get? It's not important, No, it's
very important. I know I made it almost in the
season finale. I have one more.
Speaker 3 (53:08):
Episode from the season finale of season one. Okay, I
don't know if I'm going to finish because I don't
want to get into a space where I'm like, now
I have to watch season two because of what happened
in season one.
Speaker 1 (53:26):
Like I want to in this journey, I'm trying to
remember and I the problem is with.
Speaker 3 (53:33):
Like shows in general, And I know you know it's
a spoiler. You know, no spoilers on the show that
came out ten years ago.
Speaker 1 (53:40):
I get that, right, So like I see.
Speaker 3 (53:42):
Clips, so I see where like where ghosts, where Angela dies,
and like he.
Speaker 1 (53:48):
Was like the love of my life. Oh yeah she
did die, didn't she? And all that stuff. So I'm like, okay,
see I forgot so many things.
Speaker 3 (53:55):
See, I'm like watching, I'm just like the best part
of this show is the theme song. They say this
is a big rich town. Yes, yeah, But I bring
up this all to say, because this is a longer
conversation about Joe.
Speaker 1 (54:16):
I think that we don't since we don't have many.
Speaker 3 (54:24):
Male vocalists of the time that we respect, because you know,
like Brad McKnight dead to us, right, boys to women
and Jannie don't really perform like that, but we all
know he's been horrible to his children and women and people.
Speaker 1 (54:37):
Wait, why doesn't he perform like that?
Speaker 3 (54:39):
Jane Boys just doesn't perform in general. No, No, because
Sean got a whole YouTube channel and podcast. What's you
talking about? Flatters no music, It's a less popular version
than what Claude.
Speaker 1 (54:54):
And Chuck got, which is a fantastic, a wonderful program,
fantastic show.
Speaker 3 (54:59):
Yeah, everybody tries to emulate, but they can't duplicate. Tank
does a good job, Yes, yeah he does. Sometimes he's no,
he's he's yeah, it's no, we sound crazy. No, and
it's no, it's fine, it's fine. But Joe, right, I
(55:24):
hate the song stutter.
Speaker 1 (55:26):
Me the fuck too.
Speaker 8 (55:46):
Oh.
Speaker 1 (55:47):
I hate that song so much. Yeah, but you know,
I've had to think about this a lot. I don't
like Joe's music.
Speaker 3 (56:01):
You remember how we were in the car, and we
were and I was saying, how there's a bunch of
artists like who have like hip hop artists that have
singles and stuff, but you never go and listen to
their full album. So like, for example, we were in
the car and Rich Boys on the crack Boat that
came on play list, and we were like, no one's
ever listened to to what's the young man's name who
(56:25):
sang the song rich boy.
Speaker 1 (56:27):
Rich Boy? No, and we First of all, I would
like to also say fuck Chris Rogers because the reason
we was listening to Ridge. Yes, the song still knocks,
but the reason we were listening to it is because
so at one point when I'm like prepping and doing things,
(56:49):
Chris Rogers is playing music and I noticed it's like,
you know, TLC and in Vogue and high five and
so for real and you know, great black classics of
a generation. But and I stopped and I said, Chris Rogers,
(57:10):
are you playing this because you think this is what
we listened to because you know he's younger. And he
was like yeah yeah, he was like I was trying
to relate. And that was also why Rich boykmeboard. But
it did spark a good conversation because we were like,
who's listened to an entire Rich Boy album? I'm sure
(57:33):
people from Alabama that's where he's from. Let's look at
Joe's catalog because you said you don't like Joe. So
the fact that I don't like he's no kim you
know what I mean, Like, he's no who like? Meaning
like and I don't hate Joe. I was like, why
would you do that? No? In the negative comparison, Okay,
(57:53):
all right, he's nobody. I would like wish you know,
bad breath on for attorney, you know what I mean?
Like not that, but it was really rude or not
Joe is rude? Yeah, now I'm justified. I didn't, you
know how like Brian McKnight, i'll publicly be like fuck
his horse face as Joe was. I don't know if
(58:16):
I caught him on a bad day. So like that's
why I'm always like you. I don't I'm not gonna
say you're a nasty person. I might have caught you
on a bad day, but when I met him he
was not particularly but neither was Uncle Phil resting rest Yeah, yeah,
a bad day. We don't know how these people so
(58:37):
all the things your man won't do? No, okay, that's
what would I put That is a very what's a simp?
And as a song if you think about it, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
like I know you got a nigga.
Speaker 3 (58:54):
It's Neutrogena oil music, you know what I mean, like
Hot six oil music.
Speaker 1 (59:00):
I mean, yeah, African Pride. I want to know to know,
so Girling never understood African Pride oil music is I
(59:22):
want to know what turns you on? I want to know,
And I guess we're asking for permission and asking things. Sure,
but it's also like so I can be.
Speaker 3 (59:37):
And I also hate the sentiment of that song because
I hate it when dating when people ask you like
what's you're tight, and they try to do everything to
fit that type, and it's like, Nigga, I know you're
being phony.
Speaker 1 (59:50):
Like telling me you're a vegan but you're downstairs eating bacon, turkey, ham, cheese,
baking grease sand which is this? I said, that's the
most phenomenal sounding club every meat, and it's not a
delicious eat. But also, how are you gonna say you're vegan?
That bitch had everything that was not vegan. No lettus.
(01:00:12):
And that's my point.
Speaker 3 (01:00:13):
When people try to be phony and try to like
get in where they fit in and by lying right.
Speaker 1 (01:00:20):
So, where's the happy medium for you? Then esther between
getting to know somebody and like that element of learning,
I guess.
Speaker 3 (01:00:31):
You can tell when niggas are like And then for
that example, right like, like I said, I looked at.
Speaker 1 (01:00:39):
Him and I was like, oh, you're right, he goes,
I want to know what makes you cry so I
can be the one who always makes you smile. That's
that's weird. I can't be the only one that I
want to know what makes you cry, so I know
the best way. You tell me what's the best way
to comfort you exactly? How do I support you when
you're feeling? Are you like a person who likes to
(01:01:00):
be left alone? Do you like an embrace? Because I
don't like niggas removing options for me. Oh no, no, no, no,
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:01:06):
Now you're telling me whenever I'm in a jam a
pickle of bne, you gotta be captain saving for me.
That's not what I need you to be an apartment
and I want to know all these things so I
can be a band aid, a pacifier or whatever.
Speaker 1 (01:01:20):
The fuck? How about you should just what you should
know about me is that you should just shut up.
You know what else? Is a creepy lyric of his.
If we really break it down, I'll take you out
on a night cruise on a yacht. Why the fuck
do you want to take me on a yacht at
night in the middle of the water where you can't
(01:01:41):
hardly see anything. Girl. To me, you like a diamond.
I love the way you shine. One hundred million dollar treasure.
I give the world to me to mine. But like,
why why a night cruise? Listen? Like, why is it
(01:02:04):
that specifically you set me up to kill me? Yeah?
Listen black people boats historically? Well, I know, I think
we need to break down some Okay, So the.
Speaker 3 (01:02:13):
Only song that I like about Joe, like by Joe,
I can't necessarily like because it's written by a felon scene,
more and more.
Speaker 1 (01:02:24):
If you think about the song and it sounds just
like this, and I don't like it's very embittered. But
I can't say that, No, you can't wait. Joe had
a song with in sync. What this had to be
(01:02:44):
a soundtrack? Yeah, whether that Music of the Heart or something.
My name is Joe. It's called I Believe in You?
Oh uplifted? Oh yeah? No, Okay, so you don't like
love scene, let me look at the because now you're
about to make me.
Speaker 3 (01:03:01):
Like I said, the only thought I liked is more
and More, And I hate it because our fey wrote it.
Speaker 1 (01:03:07):
I didn't even know he wrote that song. If you
listen to if you listen, you be like, oh, this
sounds exactly like this would have came from the closet.
You know, you know, you know Robert is a hard
no for me, right, Like he's a big hard stop,
Like he's a he's a hard no for me. It
(01:03:27):
gets hard if it's just because we know the we know,
we know his crimes, what he was singing about, and
how those intersected. It gets hard when it's a song
he's written.
Speaker 3 (01:03:38):
That's how I'm always conflicted about changing faces, right, right,
because ghetto out is a is a Negro spiritual however, but.
Speaker 1 (01:03:48):
Also but like Cosby Show, should all the other actors
pay the crime for you know what I'm saying. It's
like call out his ship and there's and there may
very well be. You know, you watch it and you're like,
I can't like it just can't sit. It doesn't sit
with me right right, But it's like, where's the line
with the other people? So like changing faces is like,
(01:04:11):
so changing faces got to pay the crime for this nigga.
You know, it's like it's hard, it's tricky. But then
when you have the knowledge that he wrote something like
didn't he write pretty wings? U? No? No, no, no,
he wrote no on Maxwell song he wrote no, it's
not pretty wings. He wrote whenever wold No. I'm gonna
(01:04:37):
look it up in a minute, but it'll hold on
love seeing Joe because we're still dissecting Joe lyrics. He's
the hell, He's the male Heather Head lyric My mo
okay baby lying on the bed, exotic fan see's going
(01:05:00):
through her head. I jump into my sl six. I
gotta make my way to the crib mad quick. I
see my baby as a step inside she's staring at
me with those bedroom minds, honey, sipping on some charde.
The sex is even better when she's feeling that way.
Speaker 3 (01:05:20):
Mmmm.
Speaker 1 (01:05:23):
How many drinks will I take you to leave it?
Be speak gam am a vase for.
Speaker 3 (01:05:45):
You know?
Speaker 1 (01:05:45):
Wh Wow? Yeah, I know that's that one was crazy.
How many drinks will it take you to leave with me?
You know who was very good about asking for consent?
Teddy Pendergrass. Hold on, I'm gonna tell you. Hold on,
I'm gonna tell you. I'm trying to think. I'm like,
(01:06:05):
what's up. No, I'm gonna tell you, well, listen, once
you like, you're the latest, You're the greatest. Once you
once you Okay, where the hell Teddy Pendergrass. Y'all don't
have him on there? Teddy, you know, turn alof, turn
(01:06:29):
off the lights and light a candle burner. Hold on it?
We okay, So come and go with me first, all right.
(01:07:01):
He's trying to holler at this lady right yeah, or
the person he says in the first verse. I don't
feel like being lonely tonight, he stated in intention. You
see you see I want I want some company clear tonight.
(01:07:22):
And you look like You're just my type, right, you know,
niggas aw, there's always something even interesting. You're the kind,
You're the kind whose spirits are running free. So okay,
let's take a sip of some cold, cold wine. That
means you like a pet now like me that I
like that. It should be chilled and dance to the
(01:07:45):
music nice and slow. You want to do an activity,
a little for play, a little romance, very nice, and
you won't be under any kind of pressure, you see.
We'll just we'll just let the evening flow, all right, wonderful. Yes,
now he did invite her to his place, which is
a red flag, but you know, yeah, we're going to
(01:08:06):
ask him that. It's not the first thing. Yeah, and
you know things were like it wasn't as many bars
and Dave and Busters back then, you know what I mean. Okay,
this is where it's again. Niggas always say, you look
like you're just bored today and you want to get away.
M hm, you want to get away from this noisy crowd.
(01:08:28):
I absolutely do. I'm so glad you tapped into me
being overstimulated. Let's go where it's nice and quiet, library,
where there's nobody, nobody else.
Speaker 3 (01:08:38):
Around the library because nobody's reading. Let's sit by a
cozy lit fire and we can be in each other's company. Now,
how does that sound to you? Sounds fabulous, actually, you
see because it sounds so good. It sounds so good
to me. Now, let's see. My car is right outside.
(01:09:05):
We can leave right now. That's if you're ready to go.
I know you're just meeting me, you see, I'd understand it.
I'd understand it if you said no.
Speaker 1 (01:09:19):
Mm hmm. But don't do it, baby, because I'm wanting
love yourself a little bit more. Come on and go
with me, come on over to my place.
Speaker 3 (01:09:28):
Yeah, that's okay. Now there is consent, but there is
also like just come on, you know you want to.
I mean, it's my duty to please that booty like
that kind of thing. Nigga exactly, And you know niggas
do that.
Speaker 1 (01:09:42):
But that is that is way more consenting than your
whatever the hell is going on nowadays? Mm hmmm mm hmmm. Well,
AnyWho that could go? Today's episode that was pretty Oh
should I talk about the bitch? There we go the
next episode? Oh, copy talk about why it's only groceries?
(01:10:06):
Oh yeah, yeah, we do.
Speaker 3 (01:10:09):
Until next time, Friends and same clothes that we're wearing
today all next week, babe.
Speaker 1 (01:10:21):
Yes, and we're moving on