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May 4, 2025 • 84 mins
Like It Or Not with Rebecca Azor - Free to tell the truth and not care who doesn't like it! Bring your coffee or drinks and join hosts Rebecca Azor, DJ XXXclusive and Benjamin Dixon for culture, news, music and dad jokes! Saturday mornings!

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Like It Or Not streams live Saturday mornings on YouTube, Twitch and Facebook. The podcast version of the show was previously published on The Benjamin Dixon Show podcast and earlier episodes can still be found there.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
The Black Heritage Day app. Download today on Google Play
or the Apple App Store.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
Sarah Lewis fun was born on this Hi This is
Jeremiah John H.

Speaker 1 (00:13):
Johnson.

Speaker 3 (00:14):
But today let us not forget our death to Tucson.
Enoja McMillan was born on this day in nineteen oh four.

Speaker 4 (00:22):
Marshall Najor Taylor was born in Indianapolis, Indiana, on November.

Speaker 3 (00:27):
Curried on this day, December twentieth eighteen.

Speaker 2 (00:32):
Work that we're doing here is not gonna stop when
it comes to these tide of discussions. It's gonna be
for us and by us here on this platform when
the media is telling us to look the other way.

Speaker 3 (00:41):
Your support is what helps us move forward.

Speaker 2 (00:44):
Join picture on dot com, forward slash cyke it or not,
help us grow, like it or not.

Speaker 5 (00:50):
It starts now. Good morning, good morning, good morning.

Speaker 3 (01:00):
Good morning, and welcome to like it or not what
We're free to tell the.

Speaker 1 (01:02):
Truth and not care who doesn't like it.

Speaker 3 (01:05):
Hey, good morning everybody. What's up with you guys.

Speaker 2 (01:08):
It's great to have Bubba back with our original good morning,
good morning.

Speaker 3 (01:14):
Ben wasn't doing it right.

Speaker 1 (01:16):
I listen, I know my role, I know my lane.
I'm not the good morning, good morning, good morning.

Speaker 5 (01:23):
You know where to stay at right.

Speaker 1 (01:25):
Listen, I fall back and speak when the time opportunes itself.
I just I just lay in the cut.

Speaker 2 (01:30):
No, and we respect it because you know, the good
morning is always missed.

Speaker 3 (01:34):
But Ben does it. You know, Ben does it in
the Preachervice. It's always missed from our beloved DJ Baba.
How are you doing this morning?

Speaker 5 (01:46):
I'm good. It's good to see y'all. Man, And real quick,
keppy birthday mama when she just celebrated her seventieth birthday, right,
we did. I got the clip too. I wanted to
sell everybody the clip. And while she's in the chatter
droom as well, to David if you haven't ready, that
is it's the birthday.

Speaker 1 (02:04):
Mama, Gwen.

Speaker 3 (02:05):
Because I saw her in the streets.

Speaker 5 (02:07):
Okay, in the streets. Shot took her out. That's that.
Excuse me. She's gonna get me for this too. Okay,

(02:34):
look at you doing it, y'all know that's me.

Speaker 4 (02:39):
Shot.

Speaker 3 (02:39):
Shot, it's my husband, like, oh, you gotta take a shot.

Speaker 5 (02:43):
Look what's the face.

Speaker 1 (02:47):
Hey, that wasn't a little shot either.

Speaker 3 (02:49):
It was she had another drink on her her So
it's just draw that solid is you don't hear a
bubble the background? Okay? He was everything, yeah, saying every
role in the background for real.

Speaker 5 (03:09):
Oh man, I love Happy birthday.

Speaker 3 (03:12):
Both of you guys said that at the same time.
Was that Ai? Was that Ai? Okay? That was very strange.

Speaker 2 (03:21):
It was it was same time, same bald heads, Fameball,
the same headphones.

Speaker 1 (03:31):
But we certainly don't have the same beard.

Speaker 5 (03:33):
It's coming in, it's coming in, it's getting it.

Speaker 1 (03:35):
It's been coming in for thirty years, going nowhere.

Speaker 3 (03:38):
Then your your beard is here. You just you just
cut it down.

Speaker 5 (03:41):
We see that, right.

Speaker 2 (03:42):
Anyone that was connecting the dots, we are not there anymore.
Because he was he was soon in his thirties at
the time, so he said he wanted to do the
because men when they when they hit like mid thirties.
I think when I met Ben, he was the age
that I am now, and so he was in the
face like, oh, you know, I'm trying to grow my
beard out. Yeah, that's what I'm trying to do. You know,

(04:04):
Ball about to do the beer thing. Because Ben still
had hair when I met him.

Speaker 5 (04:09):
He barely.

Speaker 3 (04:12):
He was still putting you know.

Speaker 4 (04:13):
It was hanging on for dear life.

Speaker 1 (04:19):
Man was like, please have some more.

Speaker 3 (04:21):
And then he was like, tell me. So there's this
thing I do.

Speaker 2 (04:24):
You know, people don't know this, and I'm not I'm
not telling them.

Speaker 3 (04:29):
But now you don't even have to do that no more.

Speaker 1 (04:34):
Like you you you know, you know how many black
men I put up on that game. I done put
a lot of black there's a little something something something
to get from your wife.

Speaker 3 (04:43):
And you just let me tell you.

Speaker 2 (04:45):
I've been in a couple of men's homes and I've
seen them. I seen those so soon I see those
same tools, and.

Speaker 1 (04:51):
I said, oh my goodness.

Speaker 2 (04:53):
But you let me be clear, I'm not talking about Beijing.
Men didn't do that.

Speaker 1 (04:59):
It was a little more creative that and it was
it was it was affordable Walmart especially. I did not.

Speaker 2 (05:07):
And don't get me wrong, when I was working in
the studio, mind you, we were working in studio at
the time. When I was working in studio at the
local news station. You would love to see what the
other people were doing. They were they were doing all
the things. But I have to say, ben, no, you're
your beard is actually I.

Speaker 1 (05:24):
Used to use it up here too. You need to
fill in that your beard is.

Speaker 3 (05:28):
Actually perfect now for me, My secret is I gotta
make sure ban was like you got a mustache.

Speaker 1 (05:41):
Hey, her mustache was mustache and more than my mustache.

Speaker 6 (05:45):
It was time, right.

Speaker 2 (05:47):
I didn't ask God to make me harry, but you
know I know that while me being on camera, I
gotta maintain it and the way you gotta maintain it,
like sensitive skin, maintenance, all the things to me. And
then I got a beauty mark right here. I know
people think that I draw that on. That's something I
was literally this is this is small. That's that's literally
a beauty mark.

Speaker 5 (06:06):
It.

Speaker 2 (06:06):
Yeah, I can't take it off. So people look straight there.
They look straight there, and sometimes it was given you know.

Speaker 3 (06:19):
All that right up and there.

Speaker 5 (06:22):
We started off on you just gotta yeah, I say this,
I give y'all a little secret. That's why I love
this camera because if you look, if I turned to
the side, actually the other side, you can't see it.
But that's good. But there's a plug right here in
my beard that nobody ever knows about. It just looks
so full on camera, but in reality, it's just like, ye,

(06:44):
let me pick that out a little bit. Let me
get like some head extensions and plugged me in some.

Speaker 3 (06:49):
But yeah, not you just told them the secret.

Speaker 5 (06:52):
I did y'all had, so how you do that?

Speaker 1 (06:57):
Look, look, let me tell you something. There are many
there are many seats prints up the male uh persuasion
that I've had to learn much later in life than
I should have learned. Somebody should have told me this
stuff when I was like twenty one. So but but
that's show. That's for a men's only show, and I
can't go underneath. It's not fasten during that show. So

(07:19):
we'll get back to sou to look.

Speaker 6 (07:22):
They need to.

Speaker 2 (07:22):
They need to definitely shout out to skin timent, because
that's what I got.

Speaker 3 (07:26):
To use, the skin timent. Sensitive skin.

Speaker 2 (07:30):
It keeps me, keeps me good, all right, because I'm
in the age where then you start.

Speaker 3 (07:35):
To get the three the three fold down here right
up here. Man, you got her.

Speaker 2 (07:40):
Listen, I be at the light. I'll be looking over
and to be a lady that'll be like this. When
you see her doing that, she ain't thinking she's trying
to find a pizza. Hell man, anybody, how are y'all doing? Listen,
We just we're just starting with it.

Speaker 3 (08:00):
We're just getting right into it regardless.

Speaker 2 (08:03):
These are all you are beautiful people with our flaws,
with our however, my skin is still beautiful. One thing
about it. God gave me beautiful skin, and I'm grateful
for that.

Speaker 3 (08:15):
David. That's crazy, That's that's crazy. But God did give
me beautiful But anyhow, y'all, what is on?

Speaker 2 (08:28):
There's so many things on and I wanted to I
know that we discussed sugar war the other day.

Speaker 3 (08:34):
I can't remember what I said.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
I wanted to go into uh for today, Ben, there
was something that I said I wanted to go into.

Speaker 6 (08:42):
But but so.

Speaker 1 (08:43):
You know, you can't ask me about four days ago.
You could about four hours ago.

Speaker 3 (08:50):
There's so much has already happened.

Speaker 2 (08:51):
But before I get there, did you guys get a
chance to go?

Speaker 3 (08:55):
He sinners twice?

Speaker 1 (08:58):
Wow?

Speaker 5 (09:00):
Because AMC membership three three free movies a week, child,
and two of them are sinners.

Speaker 3 (09:06):
So when I'm large, three free movies a week.

Speaker 5 (09:10):
Twenty five dollars a month, because that's all you pay,
and any mo any movie there in the country, as
long as the AMC you can see three movies for
free twenty five dollars a month because at that point,
because what the price that you pay for a regular
ticket unless you're going like on a Tuesday or like
a mad dame. That's two movies right there, because hell,
seeing in our max is thirty dollars for a single ticket. Yeah,

(09:32):
so I said, I see your referral link, so I
can get some I get a kick back.

Speaker 3 (09:38):
Oh, it gives you back, so you get something for that. Well,
once I can't afford it, then you can't afford to
go to the movies.

Speaker 2 (09:45):
Three twenty five dollars is crazy, right, movie that much?
I heard somebody knows a link to a link to
the link that people can watch, and I actually have
been one of those people have who have been fitted from.

Speaker 5 (10:00):
Links I got.

Speaker 2 (10:03):
I got a website, y'all, small small acts in the corner,
because that will send you somewhere else. But once you
get back and reload, you back on it. That I
heard that.

Speaker 3 (10:12):
I heard that.

Speaker 5 (10:13):
Look, I'm saying something with y'all right now, and I
chat that y'all can go see whatever you want.

Speaker 3 (10:20):
Okay, Okay, find the way. Okay.

Speaker 5 (10:26):
I was the man back in the day, so already
you you man what look I used to sell him
at his job.

Speaker 1 (10:33):
I used to make too much money off of media. Yes,
before media, but it was medi I helped. I helped
media get famous out.

Speaker 5 (10:41):
Tyler Perry owe us money, bro We spread media through
the Black Church like crack spread.

Speaker 3 (10:46):
Through that time. Media got no listen.

Speaker 2 (10:49):
We would even the Haitian, the Black Church, literally the
black just every type of black was watching.

Speaker 3 (10:57):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (10:58):
We were doing like movie nights, no more, no more
movies about the end of times or what's the thing
when Jesus coming back to get us?

Speaker 1 (11:14):
Well behind.

Speaker 2 (11:16):
We were watching media. We were literally watching media. And
I know for sure that we packed the movie theaters out.

Speaker 3 (11:24):
It was one year.

Speaker 2 (11:25):
This is when they even didn't have any type of ordinance.

Speaker 3 (11:30):
They didn't have anything.

Speaker 2 (11:31):
We went to the movie theater and people were sitting
on the steps at the movie theater during the movie.

Speaker 1 (11:37):
Yes, and that's only because we uh sold so many
copies of the stage play. We went out there and
spread We were his distribution arm. He didn't need the
money from us, and so we helped you. Tyler Perrent,
that's all right, man, God bless you. You're a billionaire now.
We even a billionaire wouldn't even won't even know that
brother for somebody else. We ain't seem so long. He

(11:58):
could be in the movie theater, in the movie studio,
don't even come out in public no more, don't go
to churches no more. He's just in his studio.

Speaker 2 (12:04):
No more churches. You know what's so crazy? Like, So,
I got a question for you, Ben with that being said, like,
help me understand, because I guess I have my own
personal thoughts on that. Because he helped we excuse me,
the church helped build him up. Does he owe it
to the church to stay in the church.

Speaker 3 (12:27):
Like content?

Speaker 1 (12:29):
No, No, no, I don't think so. I don't think.
I don't think he owes the church anything. I think
as a black man, he can decide what level now
we have our standard of our contribution back to the
black community. That's but that's his prerogative. So, but I
don't think he expressly owes the Black church anything at all.

Speaker 5 (12:48):
Yeah, yeah, because you know Taller period at one point,
that's all is all of the movies when they came
out in the stage place had something church related in it.
Then finally when he got the studio, it moves church.

Speaker 1 (13:02):
Because now I'm not gonna listen. He does have this
one show out that I genuinely genuinely the black, the young,
the young Young. What is the boys name? Young Tyler
Young Young Young Dalan Young Dylan.

Speaker 3 (13:20):
Where is that?

Speaker 5 (13:21):
It's Nickelodeon, right, yeah.

Speaker 1 (13:23):
Nickelodeon Young dealing on Nickelodeon.

Speaker 3 (13:26):
It's it's hard about that.

Speaker 1 (13:27):
It's kind of like, you know, it's a step up.
I think the production is great, the storylines, it's you
know what, it's a perfect place for Tyler Perry's writings.
And I'm why am I saying this when I know
I'm gonna want to use the studio one day, But
Nickelodeon is a perfect place for Tyler Tyler Perry style
writing because it doesn't have to be particularly deep or
particularly spectacle. A little Young Dylan Young deal you Okay.

Speaker 3 (13:53):
So it's the Little Bill. It's like Little Bill but Lan, but.

Speaker 1 (13:56):
It's it's live action. They have Cole from Martin on there.
It's it's literally like the you know, like it's a
little it's a little bit like Raven and and you know,
culturally it's a little bit like that, but it's, uh,
you know, it's just really it's really good content that

(14:16):
you could cut on and leave your kids there and
not worry about them dripping off into like like hyper
sexual stuff. Like there's so many shows that you just
put on. You know, everybody's kissing somewhere, everbody's making it out.
It's like, come on, it's it's Nickelodeon. So it's cool
in that way, and it's message.

Speaker 5 (14:32):
Yeah, yep, Rebecca, let's say you know that was it
that girl?

Speaker 1 (14:37):
Yes?

Speaker 5 (14:38):
Okay, I don't want to say along the lines of that,
but like with black actors, it's yes. I haven't watched,
but I've seen clips and it seems to be very
very good.

Speaker 6 (14:48):
It is good.

Speaker 5 (14:48):
It's good. Yeah, and I suspect that.

Speaker 1 (14:51):
Okay, So since we're talking about shows, there's a show
that y'all have to watch you I think, I think
you're gonna love it, called The Residents.

Speaker 6 (14:58):
It is.

Speaker 2 (14:59):
Then I was just, yeah, just talking about this yesterday's
night in which I finished it. Yet I literally just
threaded about this. I said, my goodness, what a great
body of work and messaging behind it. Yes, still left
me with questions, but the main messaging, especially in this climate,

(15:21):
was perfect.

Speaker 3 (15:22):
And I don't want to give too much away, but
she got to watch it.

Speaker 6 (15:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (15:26):
Uzzo Aduba is the one that playing. You guys might
know her as crazy from Orange to the New Blade.

Speaker 1 (15:34):
Ah, that's where I know her from. I kept trying
to figure out where I know her from.

Speaker 2 (15:37):
Okay, seeing her develop and be how she is right now.
But I've always knew she was a brilliant actor. But
seeing her in this way, checking as a new mom
and all this other stuff that's going on her personal life,
but she captivated that character. And I know that character
was not written for an actual Uzo in real life

(15:58):
because this is based off of a book right from
a journalist author uh CNN analysts or contributor. I forget
her name, but this is based off the book. The
book has other like when you when I was reading
over the summary of the book and I read a
few pages online and I'm like.

Speaker 3 (16:15):
Oh, okay, that's cool.

Speaker 2 (16:16):
But the way our good black sys that sometimes I
don't like some things, some things that she does, because
it'd be like, do we gotta be white and black
all the time, Hinda, But Shanda, she ate.

Speaker 5 (16:28):
Did her thing.

Speaker 1 (16:29):
She did her thing on that show. There.

Speaker 3 (16:32):
It was so good. It was so good.

Speaker 1 (16:35):
Let me tell you something. The way they entangled all
those different characters and all those different narratives and all
those different possibilities and all the drama and all the nuances,
and they're the main character. Was just like it's like
And I laughed about it because the Lord, I'm gonna
say this live on. I was laughing with my wife
about it. I say, you see how her synapses are firing.
You see how her brain is firing. I said, that's

(16:55):
what it's like when you get high. Your brain just
just connected all the guys. And then she was not
high at all. She was just there, just killing.

Speaker 3 (17:02):
She was a bird high.

Speaker 1 (17:04):
To a bird of bird.

Speaker 2 (17:09):
Because I'm a person I don't watch birds like her,
but I feel like I'm becoming a bird lady. And
I was like what she says, when you actually see
the birds, And but she was able to put them
together and then correlate them with the different presidents from
the past and all this other stuff.

Speaker 1 (17:26):
They got Belkie from Perfect Strangers is on there.

Speaker 5 (17:32):
I love.

Speaker 3 (17:33):
That's way back from what's the is the so called
Ka Brown?

Speaker 5 (17:40):
What's Paradise?

Speaker 3 (17:42):
No, she's not this is Us?

Speaker 5 (17:45):
This is okay.

Speaker 6 (17:47):
From this is Us?

Speaker 1 (17:48):
Right? Did you got me on that one?

Speaker 3 (17:50):
But I just know she's the wife I could be.

Speaker 5 (17:54):
She is Rebecca.

Speaker 1 (17:57):
Yeah, so the only reason I mentioned it, only reason
I brought up the residents, besides it being great and
everybody should absolutely go see it. Was My guess was
that they used Tyler Perry's white House because Harry has
a full blown white house on But no, they built this.

Speaker 5 (18:16):
Being I thought it was. I thought it was his
studio because somebody else said that as well. I'm about
to get the battery. Now.

Speaker 1 (18:23):
This was done so well. I would watch it again
and again me too.

Speaker 2 (18:26):
It was so beautiful. Yeah, where did I wanted to
know where Bubba was gonna say?

Speaker 3 (18:31):
He saw?

Speaker 2 (18:32):
He thought where it was from. I think the production
was amazing. Yes, the acting was phenomenal.

Speaker 1 (18:42):
The coloring, the set, the quality that the lighting was.

Speaker 2 (18:47):
The messaging, like I'm still questioning because it was a
murder mystery. I'm still questioning some things.

Speaker 1 (18:57):
But I and the love story, that was the love
story that they put in there really quick.

Speaker 2 (19:03):
But my god, I'm like, but how we got an
immigration an immigration story right, yes, right in this mess,
immigrating story, a love story, uh story, story about the
how the White House was built off the backs of
black people, And it doesn't function.

Speaker 3 (19:21):
Without black people got that messaging I did.

Speaker 1 (19:25):
Yeah, no, y'all, for real, go watch The Residents. If
you need a password to Netflix, let me know.

Speaker 3 (19:31):
I think I still got your to my computer. I'm terrible.

Speaker 5 (19:37):
I have been.

Speaker 1 (19:38):
I have been, uh practice, you know, that's what we
call it in my comrades. Practice. I have been practicing
collectivism for a very long time with Netflix. I think
I got thirty people.

Speaker 3 (19:49):
So it was it looks just like it.

Speaker 1 (19:51):
That was.

Speaker 3 (19:54):
It looked just like this.

Speaker 1 (19:55):
Because because I told you he built all it was,
he said it wasn't.

Speaker 3 (20:00):
Okay, I guess that's what the White House really looks like.

Speaker 1 (20:03):
Then, yeah, I guess that makes sense too, right.

Speaker 3 (20:06):
Yeah, look, I guess the White House don't have a look.
But yeah, that that was a phenomenal show.

Speaker 2 (20:14):
Another, yeah, another show that I would big up recently,
and I don't what was the dang show called that
I'm watching?

Speaker 3 (20:23):
Oh, it's called Beyond the Gates.

Speaker 2 (20:24):
Now, this is not anything that is too It's actually
a daytime soap opera that's all black and it is
making I talked about it last year coming out, and wow,
when I can say that this is what you call
soap opera and they are they are literally and you
know soap operas. If you guys know why it's called
soap opera is because people used to utilize that time,

(20:48):
I think in radio or television to sell soaps. So
they would do these type of commercials or these types
of shows. And this is why this became called the
soap opera. And they are literally on there like it's
so crazy. Uh, this room sounds amazing for breeze. Uh,

(21:08):
they in the bed like you cannot talk to him anymore.
I dropped this on the floor, babe. You know I
got you. You know I can't go no anywhere without
the tide crazy, and the tide would be like right here.
I said, Oh, they bringing it real back. They bringing
it back back. But my goodness, the blackness, the light.
It's called Beyond the Gates. You gotta get past the

(21:30):
first two episodes and.

Speaker 3 (21:31):
You're rolling from there. It's called Beyond the Gates, y'all.

Speaker 2 (21:35):
And look how the people are and they are lighting
them their hair, their clothes, the styling. They got their
own little town, their own little drama. The minorities are
the whites. It is so lovely to see, like I
love it I love it.

Speaker 1 (21:51):
Of course drama and you're saying the uh they do
product placements like without shaying this will.

Speaker 2 (21:58):
Like absolutely because opera and I, you know, I think
that they deserve too. I feel like it's amazing.

Speaker 1 (22:08):
Yeah, the Lights from Heaven Love Shine Wow.

Speaker 5 (22:15):
A soap opera? Name give me.

Speaker 2 (22:23):
In the show in every way there's drama, but it
gives you the same as a soap opera, but predominantly black.
And it's like you're gonna find yourself yelling at the
screen every day at two pm. And why not because
we had that back in the day, but predominantly white things.
And I'm not saying that, No, I am saying that
we needed something that was represented, was representative of black people.

Speaker 3 (22:47):
And I think this was perfect. This was perfect.

Speaker 2 (22:51):
Like literally, you can't get in the club if you're white.
All the white people you're uncomfortable with when you're watching it.
They make sure that you're uncomfortable with the white characters
inside of it, Like, oh my god, this white. I
hate to say that, Like you know, it's so it's
so good, it's so good, and all are beautiful people,

(23:12):
they are so beautiful.

Speaker 1 (23:13):
So yeah, yeah, well that's a good way to start
Saturday morning. I'm sorry, James, right, I.

Speaker 5 (23:18):
Know I'm about to say, because I remember the last
soaproba I used to watch was Days of Our Lives.
Mom and Daddy used to be glued to the TV
watching it. So I came up on that. So to
see an all black soap opera on TV, now, that's amazing.

Speaker 3 (23:32):
Yeah, was the one I came up. I remember Days
of Our Lives. That wasn't my time.

Speaker 2 (23:37):
So when I came up on it in the summers,
I would go to my NN's that's my aus house,
and she doesn't speak on English, but she knew exactly
everything that they were saying in the soap operas, all
because of how they were moving. You know, that's the
beauty of a soap opera house. They literally are so
theatric long drawn out positives for you to process what

(23:58):
was just done or said. The commercial comes out, and
then the commercial comes up, and then they when they
when they come back from the commercial, they're repeating the
last time that they said before the commercial, and it's
like you never forgot where you were, but mine was passions.

Speaker 3 (24:13):
Reading stupid inside of me. You are my passion for life.
Little timmy.

Speaker 5 (24:28):
Little mine was.

Speaker 1 (24:32):
Young and the restless. I was gonna say that young
I got when when when I was growing up, my
brother left off to college, my dad was going to work,
and my mom and sisters were home during the summer.
I was forced to watch because we didn't have but
what one and a half TV back then, a TV
in the in my mama room, right, So if you

(24:53):
want to watch TV, you go watch what everybody else
was watching. And that was at the same time with
how Old I Am? Y'all remember Paula Abdul. Yeah, Paula
Abdul's hit Rush Rush Her. That was the same time
I was forced to watch Young and the Wrestlers, the
old man Paula that No, she wasn't in Young and

(25:17):
the Wrestlers. It was just in between, Like my sisters
would turn it to MTV and there was Paula Abdul
and Keanu Reeves on that Rush Rush video. And then
and then they got they had to turn it back
in time because my mama wanted to watch Young and
the Wrestlers.

Speaker 3 (25:33):
Wow, what a time they pre empted.

Speaker 2 (25:37):
Look me, I was like, that's the n type black
they preempted the It wasn't it's just what they do.

Speaker 3 (25:44):
But they preempted.

Speaker 2 (25:47):
Beyond the gates these last two episodes before this past one,
but these last two episodes for the football, for sports
what was happening surrounding the football draft and all this
other stuff. And I was like, now, you know, this
is the perfect time to put this on television so
that people can get a break from seeing black people
be told that they are too They need to be humbled,

(26:10):
they need to be this, they need to be that.
This will be a perfect time to see black people
being celebraided and all of their great I know it
is a soap opera, so there is drama, but just
to see something to give us a break.

Speaker 3 (26:21):
But they were like, no, we're gonna keep black people
in a.

Speaker 2 (26:24):
Whirlwind right about stor We're gonna keep black people in
a whirlwind about who deserves what and what deserves who
and putting black people in line. I think that's one
of the things, ben that I got throughout this week
is that black people in this country have been conditioned,

(26:47):
sometimes they're unaware of it, but conditioned to believe that
we can only be good enough for whatever the white
people want.

Speaker 5 (27:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (27:05):
I don't know if I was just telling you guys
the story.

Speaker 2 (27:07):
The other day, I was feeling a little down, and
I was like, let me just, you know, grab a
little dollar too and sit by the ball just to
get out of the house. And I was sitting there
and a white couple came by me and they were like, oh, wow,
like you. They were looking at my nails first, and
then when they heard me talking, I guess it didn't match.

(27:29):
And then I picked up a phone call and I
was speaking another language, and they were really staring at
me at that point, and the man was like, so
you you like, you know, to eat the oysters.

Speaker 3 (27:38):
How are the oysters? And in my mind, I'm like affordable, affordable,
They're affordable. But I did say that. I was like,
we're actually really good. They're really good.

Speaker 2 (27:45):
And I continued on my business. He was like, wow,
I never really see people eat the oysters. I said, well,
I'm always gonna eat them, cooked, eat them. I just
made some oysters yesterday. But that's it's so good too.
You can get them for a dollar each on Fridays
at home Foods. But anyway, so I say that to say,
they were just you know, I was watching them talk
to me and It was almost as if I was

(28:07):
getting all the feelings of what I felt this week
when I saw how people were talking to Shadore about
Shadore and even going historically back to his dad. As
I sat here with these white people, they were wondering,
like why I was around this restaurant. I said, because
it's a black owned restaurant. I'm here because it's a
black hon n y'all might be here, but this is

(28:29):
a black owned restaurant. I'm here to support it. They're like, oh, yeah,
because it might be far from where you live. I
don't live far from here. Really, really, I'm like yes, really.
So then they began to talk some more and they
were like, you know, before it became a place where,
you know, diversity came in. So I'm sitting there, I'm like, no,

(28:51):
I see, I just sat here and wanted to eat
my damn oysters and here y'a go. And I found
myself at one point during the conversation, if I can
be frank, if I can be honest, I found myself
in that conversation actually because they were the questions they
were asking me, why do you live here? How did
you get to live here? Before it was diverse. Me
and my my wife moved here and we were unmarried.

(29:12):
They thought that was the bit, like they wanted to
compare that to me being black and a predominantly white city.

Speaker 3 (29:18):
Me and my wife were unmarried.

Speaker 1 (29:20):
They had oh oh they were living together, not married.

Speaker 2 (29:23):
Oh yeah, so like wow, like you're talking about you
being black here. I was unmarried when I moved with
my wife here. The challenges we had, that's what it
was giving and giving.

Speaker 3 (29:34):
And then I was just like.

Speaker 2 (29:36):
Because I didn't want to cause drama at this black
establishment with some white folks. Okay, So they were like,
you know, well, you know, my we we did pretty
great for ourselves, right, They just telling me, you know,
I don't know how you got here, but we did
pretty good for ourselves. Me and my wife, we got
here when I married her seventeen. I was actually nineteen,

(29:57):
she was seventeen. And then we just kind of like
made a family. The one thing with us we're just
so good at is communication.

Speaker 3 (30:05):
Got a daughter.

Speaker 2 (30:06):
Uh, my daughter, she's in finances. She did a really
good job. She went to college out here, and right
out of college she got a great job. How old
are you, I said, well, I'm thirty four, I'm about
to be thirty five. Oh she is too, but she
has a really great job. I just standed at him.
He said, well what do you do and I said,
I'm a journalist. I work on politics. M oh so
you say everything that Fox News tells you to say?

Speaker 5 (30:27):
Huh yeah?

Speaker 2 (30:31):
How how local beca This is my conversation at the
bar with these whites.

Speaker 1 (30:38):
I think they were trying to recruit you, and it was.

Speaker 2 (30:40):
Then, but then they said, come on, like, are you
seriously gonna say what's on your mind? I said, you
know what's so funny, I'm actually I'm a millennial, i
am Haitian, I'm black, I'm a woman. I've already worked
for local, I said, I've already worked for local news stations,
local radio, and and now I got the benefit of

(31:02):
doing this, after doing this for over a decade, I
get the benefit of doing it on my own terms.

Speaker 3 (31:07):
Like they don't got to know that we are here
struggle it.

Speaker 2 (31:11):
They're doing it on my own terms. I've worked alongside
and this is facts. Some of you know the most,
you know, biggest names, great people. I'm blessed to have
my own show that it's all black and you know,
shouts out to my producer, who white, but that's all black.

Speaker 3 (31:28):
I was telling I'm like, you know, and he's like, oh, really,
so does it they.

Speaker 5 (31:35):
Does it?

Speaker 3 (31:36):
Like it was just like all of this stuff.

Speaker 2 (31:38):
He's like, so you don't really care, like you know,
I know, you're you see what's going on and all
they're doing, but is it that like you know, you
you know, like the rest of them like you don't
seem like And I just was like check, please, check
because I felt like at that point, I said check please,
so that I didn't offend them though, because I could
attack my food, I canna tell them did all that.

(31:58):
But I just was like, dang, yeah, they want to
humble me here because I'm telling them what I do
and it's not what they assume that I did. I'm
living in a place where they don't assume I can live,
when in all actuality, this is a more affordable area
to live than it is in the city. All of

(32:20):
these things right, And I just found myself. I said
Lord when I left there, I said, Lord, forgive me,
because in that moment these people tried to humble me
and I was almost gonna walk in that like just
walk with that like yeah, you know, yeah, and I
you know, God don't and I said, God.

Speaker 3 (32:38):
Forgive me, and don't ever let me do that again
I had in my life.

Speaker 2 (32:42):
Don't ever let these people come and try to humble
me because imagine, right, this is what other people would
think about me too. These people came here. This is
not everybody's story. Imagine if you ask a room full
of black people, when did your parents get to this area?
How did they what cause them to come to this area?
When they had kids straight out of school, especially millennial children.

(33:04):
Were they able to just find a job in the procession,
Were they able to find a job right after Were
they blessed enough to just have a job lined up
for them where they can just move up the street
from you in a mini mansion afford to just you know,
get that as well, you know, and have a wedding
and have children and have all these things. You ask

(33:25):
a room for the black people, and time and time again,
we are made to be humble. We are told that
we can't get these things. And if we do live
in these cities, they will question why are you here?
Why did you get here? I always tell you, guys,
when I first moved here, which my when was one
thousand dollars US at that time. The guy that came
to put in my the AT and T guy came

(33:46):
put my internet and he kept saying, this is old
He told me, no offense is old white money. He
was a white man, an older white man. This is
old white money this area. How did you make it
over here?

Speaker 3 (33:58):
No offense?

Speaker 2 (33:59):
Like what do you do in your career? And it's like,
I don't like that. I don't like that people question
when they see black people with anything good, anything nice,
any type of ways about them where they are confident
about the strengths and they're confident about what they do.
I don't need to tell this white man that I'm

(34:21):
out here doing something that I love and working the
greatest of the grades, but not making as much as
I should to maintain, you know, things about I don't
need to tell the white man that I'm confident in
my work.

Speaker 3 (34:31):
I'm confident in what I do.

Speaker 2 (34:32):
I'm confident in the people that we touch every single
time we turn on these cameras. But they can't wait
to hear. If I would have said, you know, it
doesn't make much. Aha, it doesn't make it's that type
of vibe that they try to give. And as soon
as people like Shadur would have said something along the
line of I just should have kept my mouth shut

(34:54):
and maybe just you know, I shouldn't have been like
my father was, and maybe I was given those types. No, oh, no,
you are great at what you do. You are a
talented person, and they will always try to humble you.
So much so, and you got to see this in
the conversation that we have on lan Friends on Sunday,
but so much so they made money off of that moment.
They made sure to hold you in the I don't

(35:16):
know nothing about throwing the football. I don't like the
contact sport. I don't like any of it. Because even
when they identified an issue with what CTE on the
mostly the black players, because it's mostly a black player's sport,
when they tried to push out the fact that CTE
was messing with these people, you know medically, you know, physically, mentally,
that bothered me in itself, So football can KMA.

Speaker 3 (35:39):
However, learning and knowing.

Speaker 2 (35:42):
That what they tried to do to these men, how
they tried to belitter them, how they tried to make
it seem like, you know, they don't deserve. They don't
they can't talk. This is that shut up and dribble conversation.
If it was really that simple. You know, we had
somebody who talently protested. His name was Colin Kaepernick. Ben
we were working. We talked about this the other day.

(36:03):
We were working when this thing was unfolding under the
Donald Trump first administration. We woke up one day and
this man kneeled and the rest of his life.

Speaker 3 (36:12):
Would forever be changed.

Speaker 2 (36:14):
They took away something from him to humble him. We
had actual quotes about putting your voice in line from
Donald Trump to the NFL called him and the other
people who kneeled silently protesting.

Speaker 3 (36:30):
There was no kind of.

Speaker 2 (36:33):
Physical abuse or anything. It was silently protesting. And all
he did was taking knee. All he did was taking
me and put his sister. And he called him a
son of a bee. And that's to me, disrespect in itself.
Door And I don't think we are talking about this

(36:54):
enough because they say, oh, the pranks often happen. That's beautiful,
that's wonderful, but we can we should be able to
talk about why they shouldn't happen, especially to black children
who are already being the center of attention right in
the middle of this whole thing.

Speaker 3 (37:07):
They made sure that he was drafted. They made sure
that we would tune in.

Speaker 2 (37:10):
They made sure that they put him the television for
us to tune in every single time, and each time
an ad played, and each time something that we watch played,
anticipating to see when he would be drafted.

Speaker 3 (37:20):
They made a go off that black baby. They made
a coin off that black baby.

Speaker 2 (37:29):
And because he's talented, guys, it's not to somebody who's
out there not knowing what he's doing.

Speaker 3 (37:33):
He does more than throw a football.

Speaker 2 (37:36):
Because he's talented, and because he's confident like his father,
he might be arrogant, and so whether it's some levels
of all of that for all of us, but white
people can do it every.

Speaker 3 (37:43):
Single day, every single day, everything they do.

Speaker 2 (37:47):
And because this black boy came in knowing that he's
the best, knowing that he's one of the greatest, knowing
that he about to be number one at some point,
humble him right now, and let's let's give them a
slap on the wrist. When the white baby calls him
on the phone during a print call, knowing what he's
waiting for and make more TV out of it, literally

(38:10):
premeditated posted it and then had the nerve to apologize.
This child took this information from his Atlanta Falcons coordinator
daddy's iPad, took the number that was the number that
was not didn't even belong to him personally, but basically
was given to him by BOOST for this particular draft call,

(38:33):
for this particular draft call, and that white son of
the coordinator had it him and his friend posted the
print call. After posting it and after the backlash, after
finding out after a quick investigation, after a fine of
one hundred and fifty dollars I believe to the to

(38:55):
the coordinator and two hundred and fifty dollars to the
Atlanta Falcons themselves, they.

Speaker 3 (39:01):
Would make sure that this wouldn't happen again.

Speaker 2 (39:03):
And as I was seeing to have been the other day,
that's a stop on the wrist for them white people,
the coordinators.

Speaker 1 (39:11):
Well, you know, I was thinking about how much coordinators
actually make, and they make a bag, They make a bag,
But that hundred grand gonna.

Speaker 3 (39:17):
Hurt white man who was a coordinator for the Alanta Founds.
I ways tell you it didn't stress all.

Speaker 1 (39:26):
Speaking of money, speaking of money, not to change the subject,
but I think it kind of goes along with it.
You'll see this white lady who got who made half
a million dollars for calling somebody the N word.

Speaker 3 (39:35):
Excuse me, Oh oh.

Speaker 1 (39:39):
It was my black Yeah. No, no, that's a white
lady who just got not even I said a black man.
I'm sorry. It was a five year old. She called
a five year old the N word on video, David
go grab all that for me, and these white Christian
devils raised her half a million dollars. And it was

(40:00):
so bad in the comments section of the go fund
me account. The it's not gofund me, but it's like
gofund me.

Speaker 5 (40:06):
Right.

Speaker 1 (40:06):
It was so bad that the owner of the company
had to come out and say, we're going to cancel
all of the We're gonna remove all of the comments
in the comment section because these white Christian devils were
in there, right, you know, put in up swatstickers and saying,
here's two thousand dollars. They started, uh, they they were
spelling out the N word one person at the time,

(40:26):
two thousand dollars apart. Somebody spell it in. They got
two thousands, somebody fell it. Spell an eye. They got
somebody in two thousand. These devils are they are going wild. Seriously, no, Joe,
it's happened in a real time.

Speaker 6 (40:45):
Here it is.

Speaker 1 (40:46):
Watch the video. Here we go, watch this video?

Speaker 5 (40:48):
And do you call him a child?

Speaker 7 (40:52):
Did you call the child the nerd? It is my
business you call him? Okay, why don't you have the
boss to say it?

Speaker 5 (40:59):
Right now? Again?

Speaker 7 (41:03):
All right, that's what you're saying, nobody, that little kid?
You call him the little child? Are you about to hear?

Speaker 1 (41:17):
Wotops?

Speaker 7 (41:21):
So that gives you that I have to call the
child five years old and the inward that's what you're
gonna call him. You know that's a hate speech and
you can't do the hmm okay, we'll see about that
what the internet has to say about you.

Speaker 5 (41:37):
But you know what, but the way this country is,
it doesn't surprise me. It don't surprise me at all
that these people are paying that much money just to
just the same that inward.

Speaker 1 (41:49):
No, she's there, she she she has become the embodiment
of all of their racist hatred and their tribalism like
this is this is she's like a temp I mean,
don't get wrong, this is temporary they're gonna throw her
out with the trash, right, so as soon as she's
no longer useful to them, they'll move on. But right now,
today she is their white goddess for whom they all

(42:11):
must sacrifice two thousand dollars a pop. They are out
there giving this woman all of their money, and it's
so bad. It's so bad that every black maga that
I've come across so far, they're like, wait a minute,
what's going on? Why are y'all all saying the N word?
And I'm like, you dummies, It was worth it to me, Rebecca.
It was worth it to me to see that lady
get half a million dollars, just to see how many

(42:34):
black magas are finally like, wait a minute, something's wrong. Yeah,
you morons. You've been in league with these fascist, racist,
white Christian devils the whole time.

Speaker 5 (42:46):
So they're saying, the family of the fire has a
go fund me now. And I also I saw that
the white chick change the amount of her goal or
whatever it is, to one million dollars.

Speaker 1 (42:58):
H Yes, once she saw she made two hundred and
fifty thousand, she said, what hell, let me see if
I can make a million dollars and these white boys
across the cup. I'm sure some white women in there too.

Speaker 5 (43:09):
Please take my money.

Speaker 1 (43:10):
Take my money, my David Duke, white woman, Like it's amazing.

Speaker 3 (43:16):
I'm really pissed off about it, Like it's really for real.

Speaker 2 (43:20):
I think I seen this video a while back, but
I did not know, and I didn't I didn't see
the video. I saw the story, and I did not
know first of all, that she raised money for her
racism to.

Speaker 1 (43:38):
A fast safety she felt unsafe.

Speaker 2 (43:43):
I'm really upset about this, like I don't know why
what it's making me feel inside. But I can imagine
my child, who maybe five, who maybe a five year old,
going over to a little boy, snapped the something from
his hand.

Speaker 3 (43:54):
I handle that. I handled my child, a little mother.

Speaker 2 (43:57):
You come back, you come over to me, and you
I will handle myne You don't call my She wouldn't
have any teeth. But then that person that would if
I were beating on her or whooped her ass, sorry
Lord that day dragged her about mine, I would be
the one in jail. I be going in jail, and
I'm pretty sure GoFundMe would have been shut down. The

(44:17):
funds would have been questioned, the funds would have been
already reported. But here we are in today's day and age,
and this woman raised enough money to live her life
like it's golden just because she called a five year
old the N word more than one.

Speaker 1 (44:39):
Listen, she's gonna she's people like this. She's going to
she's going to crash out with that buddy. It's going
to go to meth. It's going to go through, it's
going to go crack, it's going to go through everything.
She's gonna get a BBL she go. This is not
gonna end well for her. I don't care how much

(45:00):
money she gets in this moment, because money is you know,
money and ignorance goes really really fast, but you know
it is enough to make you upset. And I can't
tell you all how to feel, but I don't feel
upset about this. I feel a level of clarity confirmed.
We've known this about America. We've known this about the
particular subset of white folks who have nothing more in

(45:22):
them but the deeply rooted design they want to express
their racism at the highest level. These are the same people.
If they could do another Tulsa race massacre, they would,
but a lot of them are morbidly obese and can't
even get out of their couch to come and do anything.
So you don't have to worry about too many of them.
Some of them, we do, but not too many of them.
But what I'm saying is like this is this should

(45:44):
just serve as confirmation for us that what Tupac said, right,
You know, you kill a black man, you become a hero.
But in this case, you call a five year old
N word, you become a millionaire.

Speaker 5 (45:57):
Hey say, I'm sure she's already uh docs on the internet.
I hope they have done their worse for her too,
ang with harm. I'm nobody, but I just.

Speaker 3 (46:11):
Did you see how they built up Kyle Rittenhouse?

Speaker 1 (46:13):
Do you see that?

Speaker 3 (46:15):
These are they?

Speaker 2 (46:16):
These people long for these vibral moments to change their
lives and for them to be on the the evil
side and be protected by evil. They longed for these moments.
We watched where a woman tried to do it on
on Twitter and she ended up feeling because they saw
that somewhere along the lines she was pro l g
B t q I A plus and she looked kind

(46:37):
of black somewhere in that her kids look kind of
African Americans.

Speaker 3 (46:41):
We watched literally how she lost her job, all of
that and the rights.

Speaker 2 (46:48):
The conservatives were about to adopt her, and then they
was like, hold on, let's go through her tweets and
they saw, oh, she was pro lgb t qu I
A plus at some at some point is that a
blacklack Lives Matter hashtag somewhere in there from seven years ago.
Is that they saw that and they decided, no, no, no, no,
she doesn't deserve So this white lady didn't know that

(47:09):
her life would change from her being racist. In America,
people want to keep saying, why make this about race?
I see that often now on threads. Oh great, make
this about race? Yeah, oh great, like again again, yeah again,
every single time, until something is done about it. Y'all
don't roll back so much in this day country. I'm

(47:31):
gonna keep talking about race until something is done beyond
what y'all took as well, beyond what y'all took from
us recently. I ain't even talking about four hundred odd
years ago. All the things that have been rolled back
have been about race. And even when it's not about race,
they make it about race. Immigrants in this country should

(47:54):
not be about race, but they made the black immigrants
the ones that are the face of the abuse, the threats,
the inhumane behavior. We see dei d eyes more than
about black folks.

Speaker 3 (48:14):
But they make sure they let you know that when
we're saying.

Speaker 2 (48:17):
Dei, we really are talking about the hard er we're
talking about black people in totality. They're doing it within everything,
within the defense military. We're seeing that they're finding ways
to remove black people. We're looking at in our history.
Not only were they banning books years and years ago,

(48:37):
now they're doing it where they are whitewashing the history
saying that we cooperated and da da da dah. Remember
we talked about with Harriet Tupman, some of this is
the only black history that we have that America has
even shared with us.

Speaker 3 (48:51):
Now they're trying to really whitewash it, make.

Speaker 2 (48:55):
Stories up for us to say white people were always
our allies, and white people did this, and white people,
some white people died like the white people that Kyle
Wright in House murdered, Yeah, for being our allies. So
this is what they're trying to do. Everything is literally

(49:15):
about race in this country. And you think black people
wanted to be we don't. We had to segregate ourselves
and create our own and then when we did that,
they were like, no, bring it back into the store.

Speaker 6 (49:27):
We got you.

Speaker 2 (49:27):
And then when we did that, they saw that that
was actually a problem when they support black people because
black people are not a monolith. We too are part
of the LGBTQIA plus community. We two are athletes, we
too are people who work in businesses.

Speaker 3 (49:43):
We two are all of the things. We too are immigrants,
all of the things.

Speaker 6 (49:50):
But yet.

Speaker 2 (49:53):
Every other group that might be a minority group, we
can talk to them, and when we talk to them
as a black person, being also a part of that
minority group as a minority, it's always something that is
such a difference in how they're being handled. I see
a lot of times in one of the blackest cities.

(50:14):
I see a lot of times in one of the
black cities in.

Speaker 3 (50:18):
Georgia. Right Atlanta.

Speaker 2 (50:20):
There's a place that's supposed to be predominantly for the
lgbtq I A plus in Midtown, And every time I
go there, I do not see majority black lgbtq I
a plus people living in Midtown. These people that are
running it are white people. They say race plays a
part in all these things.

Speaker 3 (50:39):
It does, it does.

Speaker 2 (50:41):
We played a video I think on the leftis mafia
of a man who voted for I want to say
it's Mace. The woman a Nancy Mace, Nancy Mace, and
somebody ran upon her, didn't run upon her, walked up
on her. A person that was a part of the
LGBTQ I A plus community, but never made that known

(51:01):
verbally to her and said to her, I voted for you.
So when are you gonna start showing up.

Speaker 1 (51:05):
Oh yes in the store, Yes, yes, in the store.
She's like, oh my god, he attack men and.

Speaker 2 (51:10):
Look, y'all, ain't even listen. I even think it to myself, sir,
just because you're white and maybe you come from a
conservative household, you are part of the group that they
hate that they're literally putting a target on that they
are literally treating as such.

Speaker 3 (51:25):
Why are you voting for this? Is it because you're white?

Speaker 6 (51:29):
Only?

Speaker 3 (51:30):
I want to know. I want to know.

Speaker 2 (51:35):
Time and time again, we will see everyone try to
act like these things are not happening to us. They'll
throw us a bone and say, but we gave them
scraps in twenty twenty, what are they asking for now

(51:57):
a basic living wage, to be able to do work
the same way other people do work equality, not be
at the job as the black person holding down the
whole thing, working all kinds of jobs, afraid to say
something because you lose your job first if you don't,

(52:18):
if you don't walk in line. So that's my spiel.
Everything is about race.

Speaker 1 (52:26):
It is, it is, it's the core driver of them.
And I realized that that when when when we saw
what's going on when it started and what's continued to
go on in Gaza. It kind of was a not
a shock to my system because we've known about the

(52:47):
seventy years of what's been going on there, but it
showed me that they still. When I say they, I
mean whiteness in every form. I don't care the ethnicity.
I'm talking about that skin color, that European skin color,
that is a driving force for them. Though none of

(53:08):
us on this side of the equation truly actually care
what anybody's color is. We just want to be left alone,
color live and to thrive. But for them, the color
of their skin is so important, their particular bloodline is
so important that they This is what the reality hit
me when I saw what happened October seventh, and after that,

(53:31):
they will literally bomb your children into oblivion and look
at the bodies of your children splayed out on the ground,
and then they'll call you racist or anti Semitic for
calling them out for murdering your children. That's the commitment
that these devils have on this planet to their whiteness.

Speaker 3 (53:55):
Then every day is a white complaint. I want to
talk to the white man. Who do I talk to
about this?

Speaker 2 (54:04):
Like, like, who is the black manager that we gotta
talk It's the Lord, because the ain't nothing that we
can do except for what we're doing now. I don't
understand why people don't get it, but it's not for
me to understand that anymore.

Speaker 3 (54:17):
I can only do what I can do, and that's
all I'm going to continue to do.

Speaker 2 (54:20):
And when it comes to our black children, especially who
are in the public eye, I don't care who Daydaddy is,
I don't care how arrogant day Daddy is. At one
point in time, we get to do that because the
next white child, right, the next white NFL draft as
gets up there and as arrogant as possible, or is
showing off him being an evangelical and then still on
food stamps and welfare and stuff like that.

Speaker 3 (54:41):
But get it past in life.

Speaker 2 (54:43):
I want to see the next little white kid when
they come up and get they get drafted, and they're
coming out arrogant. That boy Kelsey was that his name, Kelsey,
the little young the white boy as Dayton Taylor Swift.
Oh yeah, remember that when we first saw him.

Speaker 3 (55:02):
I mean he was he was trying to make sure
I find he was black ish.

Speaker 2 (55:12):
He was, and he was getting his haircut a certain
kind of way. He was to me just because he
didn't act that boy was arrogant. He showed up, he
was dating black He got a haircut. He he claimed
the haircutting because he was like, you know, I can't claim.
But they were calling it the Kelsey fade.

Speaker 3 (55:29):
They didn't care.

Speaker 2 (55:31):
Then he adopted the rapist man mustache. And then Rebecca
he dated started dating the whites of the whites, of
the white girls, who is a product of pure nepotism
and no talent, I mean sweats And people in the

(55:56):
conservative group wanted to say, how much beautiful this is
the most beautiful.

Speaker 3 (56:00):
He's ever dated.

Speaker 6 (56:01):
This is that, this is this.

Speaker 2 (56:05):
Making the black girl look like she did something wrong
at some point or whatever when there was a relationship
that just you see what I'm saying. They didn't say
anything about Kelsey, They didn't say nothing about him. They
didn't say anything about what Brett Farr I'm naming just white.

Speaker 3 (56:18):
Names that I know in the NFL.

Speaker 2 (56:20):
Didn't say anything about the other man that had like
the whole incident, stealing money, all the type of things.
They actually leveled him up on the field. Mike Vick
didn't get an opportunity. They kicked his black behind right off.
Alto Sinkle talks about how he didn't even have a
long standing career within the NFL. A lot of these

(56:43):
black men are just known for their short careers. Then
I see a forty five year old what I don't
even know his name, but a forty five year old
man throwing football.

Speaker 3 (56:51):
That's crazy business.

Speaker 5 (56:53):
Yeah, forget his name too, it's crazy man.

Speaker 3 (56:57):
Ball in the back he did. He got the white
people ball, the Carl Winslow. But when the white.

Speaker 5 (57:06):
Top top back.

Speaker 3 (57:09):
On the field with that, No, no, absolutely not.

Speaker 2 (57:15):
It's all about race, and nobody can tell me, so
stop trying to humble that little boy. I don't care
what y'all say, as black people sitting there in the
comment section, whether you like sports or not, I'm talking about,
don't miss me with the fact that this happens all
the time. We gotta start unpacking why we're okay with
it happening all the time, especially to our black boys.

Speaker 5 (57:38):
That's real. That's just like what was the country singer,
y'all know what I'm talking about that, Morgan Wall. No,
it was a country singer, white country singer who said
some racist comments or something. And when I tell you,
and it's like he apologized, he said, said apologize, and

(58:01):
now you like the number one thing in country. I
cannot remember his name.

Speaker 3 (58:05):
But yeah, you're the white person.

Speaker 2 (58:09):
Ye say something that is anti white rhetoric that's dangerous
and literally say something that that sticks up for your
black community.

Speaker 3 (58:21):
Say something and you will be tattooed.

Speaker 2 (58:24):
As now, imagine if Chadour did this to the Atlanta
Falcons coordinator son who was getting hello, he would not
see the light of day. They would find him every
which way. But but they would find him every which
way but rich. They would take every dollar from him,

(58:47):
his daddy, his granddaddy, the people, his baby.

Speaker 3 (58:50):
They ain't even come here in the world.

Speaker 2 (58:51):
Yet they would get his mama, his auntie, his grandmother,
They would text everybody they could because that white boy
was humiliated on national tells.

Speaker 5 (59:00):
Yep, you wouldn't even made it to the NFL.

Speaker 2 (59:04):
And people want to say, why you want to talk
about the what is man? It's the sports, just sports. No,
we got to talk about it.

Speaker 3 (59:11):
We must talk about it because it's not only happening
in sports.

Speaker 2 (59:16):
This is mirroring what happens in other spaces when it
comes to corporations, when it comes to the digital space,
when it comes to any thing where black, a black
person is actually good and qualified, an expert has the
has the right.

Speaker 3 (59:37):
To be prideful, has the right to walk with their
head held up high.

Speaker 2 (59:47):
Y'all so used to everything being Oh, this person need
to be humble, they ain't gay.

Speaker 3 (59:51):
All that and do and do it will piss people off.

Speaker 2 (59:56):
They will pull their money from your They will pull
money from your whatever you're doing because they think that,
you know, all of a sudden, they'll say, that's different.
They acting different. Yeah, they because they don't like to
see black people stand on top and are happy and
joyful about it and walking that if it ain't hurting nobody.

Speaker 1 (01:00:20):
Wow, finished that sentence. Please, if it.

Speaker 3 (01:00:22):
Ain't hurting nobody, what is the problem to you?

Speaker 5 (01:00:25):
What is it?

Speaker 2 (01:00:26):
Are you losing money about this person being humble? Are
they made sure? I told you they made sorts of
humble them so bad? They made money off of the spectacle.

Speaker 1 (01:00:35):
I so much, man, that's just the same that the
money off the spectacle, the money off the spectacus. Literally
what that white woman is doing right now, literally with
that white woman who's getting that money. When you said
if it ain't hurting nobody, I thought you were going
to go in a different direction. Because what I'm typing
right now is we talk and I'm listening and I'm hearing,
and I'm just processing all this. It's if it's not

(01:00:58):
to them from their lens, if it's not hurting anybody,
it's not good enough. They needed to hurt, They needed
to be cruel, They needed to take from you. They
need to leave us with nothing but despair and hopelessness,
because their entire system is built off of that. They

(01:01:19):
grind us to a pulp, They grind us into humiliation,
they grind us into despair, and that's how they make
their money and so on both ends coming and going.
We're dealing with people who are so satanically evil, so
demonically possessed, just so downright just I have never seen
and I guess we shouldn't be surprised, like any has

(01:01:42):
there ever been this level of evil with this much power,
with this much algorithmic precision. They do it now with
artificial intelligence. This is the world that we're living in.
And I don't say this to make people despair. I
don't say this to make people like to fear monger
or to scare you. But I think it's really important

(01:02:02):
that we're sober and we're really clear eyed on what
precisely we're dealing with when we're dealing with these people.
We're not dealing with regular human beings. We're dealing with
human beings that love.

Speaker 4 (01:02:14):
And it's it's that it's that uh Valentine's they post
from the White House. It's that it's that asm R
post where they were the sounds of deportation. Right, if
it isn't causing harm, it's not good enough for maga.

Speaker 3 (01:02:29):
Mm hm No, I agree, m h.

Speaker 2 (01:02:36):
You talked about the d I no, actually, I'm bringing
it up. They said thet every every illegal. That's the
only DEEI that they're they're worried about handling. And they
were saying, deport every illegal. This is what the White
House is posting. This is what they're doing, and this
is why it cannot be any type of This is

(01:03:00):
where we are for people to even be considered any like. Yeah,
I'm I'm livid that we have this story about this
woman who made half a million just simply off of
the fact that she disrespected this child and they and
here we are in a world where the White House

(01:03:21):
is making content money. I know they making a dollar
two if they are, but they're luring in so many
people because their content is enjoyable, Their racist content is enjoyable.

Speaker 3 (01:03:39):
The post on social media.

Speaker 2 (01:03:41):
Deport every illegal to make an ASMR with chain swinging
on the floor. Yeah, deporting people to make sure that
you make an example out of a man who you
guys assume, excuse me, who you guys lied on and
said is a part of a game group, and make

(01:04:01):
sure that he stays over there in one of the
worst prisons in the world. You guys have mistakenly deported people,
and still y'all show up and y'all take pictures in
one of the worst conditions of a prison. A woman
just died under ice and people are just moving on
like we're still doing what we gotta do.

Speaker 3 (01:04:22):
We're picking up people. That's the most important thing we
need to do here.

Speaker 2 (01:04:26):
But then get to sell because everything is racist and
everything is about money capitalism. They said we will give
you free access to America if you got five million dollars.

Speaker 3 (01:04:38):
That's the anty of it all.

Speaker 1 (01:04:43):
I know.

Speaker 5 (01:04:44):
If I got myself pissed off, y'all.

Speaker 1 (01:04:47):
Y'all see why I happen to go ahead, James, I'm sorry.

Speaker 5 (01:04:49):
I was about to say, looking at I found the
chicks gift seeing go thing, and so I just happened
to go to their Twitter page. Is just looking at
the comments because as they removed the post, the comments
and everybody's comparing it to Carmelo Anthony. I know y'all
heard about that story, but comparing it to that just

(01:05:10):
some of the people. Man, this country is fed up, broh.
It's like, I try not to stay on this stuff
now because I'm becoming being under people paid this sometimes coming.

Speaker 1 (01:05:24):
Get them, get them.

Speaker 5 (01:05:25):
It's too much. It makes no sense. Due it makes
no sense at all.

Speaker 6 (01:05:29):
You don't know what to do.

Speaker 2 (01:05:30):
But you know, as long as we can continue to
stand on where we stand on with it, our hearts
and minds are pure each time we we can't do
anything honestly with what's happening.

Speaker 1 (01:05:43):
Oh but I'm so glad that the battle is not
all it's it's.

Speaker 5 (01:05:49):
The Lord.

Speaker 1 (01:05:50):
And I wonder and if people ever wonder why I
ran back into the arms of my Lord and saying,
Jesus Christ, it's.

Speaker 3 (01:05:57):
Because I was to be out here. I was gonna
be out here. They was gonna be like gun control,
Please God.

Speaker 1 (01:06:03):
Look, look, let's keep it a hundred.

Speaker 3 (01:06:07):
I was losing my mind.

Speaker 1 (01:06:09):
I got listen.

Speaker 4 (01:06:11):
My wife had to pull me back from before I
went back to the pulpit. My wife had to pull
me back from catching a charge. All right, So I'm
gonna keep it one hundred. One of the reasons I
came back to the Lord in the.

Speaker 1 (01:06:22):
Way that I am and I'm publicly sharing my ministry
like this is because one it.

Speaker 4 (01:06:28):
Keeps me from hurting them. And I understand a lot
of people are like, well, then you should. That's all
the more reasons you don't need religion because you need
to go out there and bang bang bang.

Speaker 1 (01:06:38):
No, you know why, because they got more guns than us.
That's number one. But then number two.

Speaker 4 (01:06:43):
I honestly, if at this point, my friends, you don't
see that this is spiritual wickedness in high places. This
is evil personified. This is demonic possession made flesh. Donald
Trump is a representation of a demon that has been

(01:07:04):
made flesh. Maga is a spirit. This is what we're
dealing with, this kind of and people were like, well,
I don't like that kind of moralistic language.

Speaker 1 (01:07:12):
If you can't see the evil.

Speaker 4 (01:07:14):
In this, I don't know what to tell you at
this point, because we're dealing with actual evil that is
not satisfied unless it is causing you the greatest level
of suffering it can muster.

Speaker 3 (01:07:27):
It's evil.

Speaker 2 (01:07:28):
One hundred days into office, now, ry about well with
one hundred and two or something at this point, but
one hundred plus days, just a little over one hundred
days into office, and we're having this conversation that we
were having eight years ago, and knowing that if we
don't continue to say what we're saying, we don't got

(01:07:50):
to say it under the conversation no more. We have
these platforms, y'all, come on, share them, like it, subscribe
to it, because.

Speaker 3 (01:08:00):
People fall into.

Speaker 2 (01:08:03):
The arms of us been said evil as from a
simple post of an ASMR because of their anti immigrant rhetoric,
or their anti woman feelings, or their anti this. They'll
fall right into the arms of this post or retweet
it or or love it, or send it over to.

Speaker 1 (01:08:21):
A friend that they'll say, this is what I voted for.
And that's like, pump this into my veins, pump this
cruelty in my mind.

Speaker 3 (01:08:31):
And the one that's saying, well, this is why I
didn't vote, but he got a point.

Speaker 1 (01:08:37):
It's Rebecca. It makes more sense when you look at
it through the eyes of actual evil, because otherwise you're like,
what is wrong with these people? Why are they doing this?
Why are they acting like this? Why are they irrational?
Why are they lying so much? Why are they believing
lies so much? And you have to understand every single

(01:08:59):
life that they believe is necessary for them to execute
the evil that they want to execute. They want a
race war, they want violence. If they could do Tulsa
race massacre every day of the week, they would just
ask Benjamin and Yahoo, right, And I refuse to not
connect this to that devil because it's the same type

(01:09:21):
of devil. And so it's very important for us one
to keep our peace. Why because we got to fight
the long fight, and if we get triggered too soon,
we'll jump off too soon and we'll take our guns
and try to run up against them. And they got
more guns than us, so we're gonna be smarter that.

Speaker 2 (01:09:37):
And and they're training on people in the defense right now.
They're like they done took somebody out I think recently,
and promoted them somebody who was questionable recently and promoted
them to another position. I forget what it was, but
I was just there's so much news going on out
of the White House, so much nonsense, so much things
to be aware of, so many, so layers, many layers.

(01:10:00):
So keep your mind right, cover your mind, keep your
mind right. And yeah, I think that's a that's a show.
That's a show.

Speaker 3 (01:10:07):
We're at the end of the show, and we don't
want to leave you like that. We love you and
we mean it.

Speaker 2 (01:10:11):
Thank you for definitely keep It's been a hundred days
and we ain't lose our minds yet. And I'm grateful
for at least I ain't lose my mind over Donald Trump.
Had other things to lose my mind over. But God
is still good.

Speaker 6 (01:10:22):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:10:25):
I'm grateful that you got are still here. Let me
get you guys. Absolutely love the episode today. And even
though we kind of just we didn't wanted to have
a kickback conversation with y'all talked so long, yeah, so long,
we got to make it a family affair. This is
our cookout, and we got a little bit of people
with some cranberries and and and in the salads and stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:10:45):
Actually, hang on, hang on, hang on. I like cranberries
in my salad.

Speaker 3 (01:10:48):
I don't like I said I like it in my
chicken salad when I was at but I say that
with a whisper.

Speaker 1 (01:10:53):
But in the potato salad, no.

Speaker 3 (01:10:57):
Checking salad at public.

Speaker 1 (01:11:00):
Busts.

Speaker 5 (01:11:00):
Right, come on, yes.

Speaker 1 (01:11:06):
See we we we we we liked some of the
same things. We just know where to place it. But
you know, we just don't put it in your.

Speaker 3 (01:11:15):
Cousin.

Speaker 2 (01:11:16):
My cousin is married to a white white and I
say it like like a Wisconsin, like a no offense
for like a Minnesota like that, like that, he's married
to one so sweet, grew up with her lover.

Speaker 3 (01:11:28):
Mean it went to their house my aunt is had.
They got her living downstairs. The girl's mom is white.

Speaker 5 (01:11:38):
White.

Speaker 2 (01:11:39):
They had her come and visit and they were living
inside of this mansion. Now, so my aunt nothing not
that she's living like a peasant. They literally made downstairs
such a beautiful place for her. Thank God, my cousin's
doing well. Thanksgiving King. The Haitians had that nicey. We
cut up our turkey. We have a whole one on
the side, but we don't really touch that. We cut
that turkey, put it in a little sauce, letter drizzled

(01:11:59):
loop on there. Let us sit marin toil. They fallen
off the bone and we eat that.

Speaker 3 (01:12:03):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (01:12:04):
Now, they had a turkey that they brought and I said,
and I said, where are the toppings? Because it was
so dry. They pulled out cranberry and just threw it
on there like it was. It was sauce, and they
told us to eat it, and I said no. They

(01:12:26):
were offended because we were downstairs eating.

Speaker 3 (01:12:29):
Rice and peas.

Speaker 2 (01:12:32):
Turkey got up eating real good. And I said to them,
They're like, why didn't you eat? She's offended because you
didn't eat. And I said, we never would think to
put turkey and some kind of cranberry form can.

Speaker 3 (01:12:47):
And put it together and eat that. Amma in life. Nope,
I know we would. That's American.

Speaker 5 (01:12:55):
Okay, A.

Speaker 1 (01:12:59):
Yelling Come on listen, I ain't gonna lie like they
got the regular old can that.

Speaker 5 (01:13:08):
Yes, we gotta take it out the can and slice
it up. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:13:14):
Lookerry, because I listen, this is one place I fall
short on I guess my ethnic uh purity, because I
don't even like all that that gritty and you know,
you know, you get the natural stuff. You got actual
cranberries in there, you got stems in there. It's kind
of gritty and grimy. And I give me the jelly
that you could slice like butter.

Speaker 5 (01:13:32):
Uh huh like yep, that was my job everythings giving Buba.
Take that out the can and slice the cranberry.

Speaker 3 (01:13:40):
Okay, look not in my house, but like I told you,
now you see what you got. I bet you was.

Speaker 2 (01:13:46):
Something was flavorful there. This lady brought a turkey that
was as dry as of it and she said, in
order to make it juicy, they're gonna just put the
canberry on top.

Speaker 8 (01:13:55):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 3 (01:13:58):
Okay, so we're at the end of the sow. I
do got to get out of here.

Speaker 2 (01:14:01):
You guys, your girl is looking for work. So that's
what I would be doing on today and I have something,
you know, a little phone call. Hopefully that leads a
little something for me for about a month. But before
we get out of here, we want to read our
super chats for the people who did support on today's episode.
But before before we get to the super chat, I
did get a cash app. I want to thank you,

(01:14:22):
don Ye, She's always given. I really appreciate it.

Speaker 1 (01:14:25):
She said.

Speaker 3 (01:14:25):
I wish I had the audacity of an unwashed white man.

Speaker 6 (01:14:31):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:14:33):
Maybe maybe that was.

Speaker 3 (01:14:37):
Sorry friend, Okay, I didn't know. All right, Uh, David
roll the first super chat.

Speaker 1 (01:14:48):
Y'all send some more cash apps all over to the family.

Speaker 3 (01:14:51):
This Wanda sending a little love to Way.

Speaker 2 (01:14:56):
Yes our way, I got you. Want to thank you
so much, tig Wig. So tig Wok has been very think.
I'm thankful Tikwik has been trying to He's been given
or they've been given. Don't even know if tikwiks is,
I don't even know, but thank you Tickwick given and
for me to get a new mic because Mike Mike
over on the other show, got a new mic, and

(01:15:17):
so he's been given to give me a new mic,
and I can't get it yet until they, you know,
dropped the the YouTube money. So whenever that comes, I
got you to we we get a new mic because
this little thing over here struggling.

Speaker 5 (01:15:28):
Look, that's how my mind was, my little is it was.
It's lost costs.

Speaker 3 (01:15:33):
But thank you Ben been ribbon right. Hello, Oh I
feel Rebecca. I used to have a Son nine five
Aero Sports, a edan car. That's not like a night
I got.

Speaker 2 (01:15:50):
I get over and questioned off into how I couldn't
afford such a nice car. It was dehumanizing because they
don't want to have nothing Tiger.

Speaker 3 (01:15:58):
They don't want us to have.

Speaker 5 (01:15:59):
Now it's clear that Tiger. The cops love Tiger because
Tiger has been in most stuff with police and a
little bit Tiger.

Speaker 2 (01:16:09):
Same year, though, I lived my life and I feel
like here, not even in the city, just here in Georgia.

Speaker 3 (01:16:15):
I've never been.

Speaker 2 (01:16:16):
Every single time I get pulled over, the sense of
anxiety all because my childhood situation, the sense of anxiety
come and then that those times that I do get
pulled over, it's always the scariest interaction every single time.
So yeah, it's terrible, but Tiger again, I don't know, Ben.
All it takes is one Fox News interview for this

(01:16:37):
lady to get a show on Newsmax or something like
the Transphobic Swimmer.

Speaker 1 (01:16:41):
Absolutely funny thing about it is the transphobic swimmer. Well
whatever her name escapes me, but she is so mad
to see this white woman get this money for saying
the N word. And somebody, somebody said, uh, uh, Conservatives
are eating each other about this. One conservative said we
should have let the transgend just swim. I was like,

(01:17:01):
good god them yeah, And another one said, uh, she's
just bad because this new white lady is moving them
on her grift. So there you go that.

Speaker 3 (01:17:13):
It's it's the fight they they're they're fighting each other.
Let him fight. Uh see thirty three three nine four
oh nine.

Speaker 2 (01:17:21):
Judge rogig is basically basically removed quality qualified immunity for
all involved in illegal Enemy Act raids.

Speaker 3 (01:17:30):
They can now be held criminally and simply liable. Mm hmm.

Speaker 2 (01:17:38):
Qualified immunity is crazy because people use that. Donald Trump
has definitely made that a word that we all knew
a few years back. To let us know that he's
using it for other people, but you're saying that they
removed it for all involved in illegal Enemy Act raids.

Speaker 1 (01:17:55):
I want to I gotta look that up. I mean too,
I had not seen that particular nuance.

Speaker 3 (01:18:01):
But let's see how we held criminally and civily.

Speaker 1 (01:18:05):
Well, here's the thing. Donald Trump is also secured like
almost nearly a billion dollars of free legal help, and
he's allocating a good portion of that to help police
officers who are accused.

Speaker 8 (01:18:17):
I was just going to say this, I'm not sure
this is. This contrasts from what Hi, everyone, This contrast
from what what was the executive order that was recently
pushed giving protection like you're saying then. But also yeah,
the fact that I think ice or what what what
what the administration just said about uh uh no warrants

(01:18:42):
being needed to raid homes as long as they suspect
gang members or terrorists or whatever, you know whatever they're
calling undocumented immigrants in order to remove them.

Speaker 5 (01:18:54):
So yeah, anyway, I took you off.

Speaker 8 (01:18:58):
I took you all off.

Speaker 5 (01:18:59):
Your vibe.

Speaker 3 (01:19:00):
No, no, thank you David for clarifying. I appreciate it all.

Speaker 2 (01:19:04):
Right, next up, but thank you so much for your
for your super chats.

Speaker 3 (01:19:09):
It's us really tuning out like we was in class, not.

Speaker 1 (01:19:14):
White prod.

Speaker 5 (01:19:15):
Everybody was like.

Speaker 6 (01:19:19):
You we really we really need to know what's going on.

Speaker 1 (01:19:30):
No, we were listening.

Speaker 3 (01:19:31):
We were listening, but it's just like that's really informative.

Speaker 1 (01:19:36):
No, no record, no, no, that's crazy crazy crazy wow
wow wow.

Speaker 3 (01:19:44):
So thank you so much for your super chat. Thank
y'all for this amazing show.

Speaker 2 (01:19:51):
As a pasty white person, you don't got to call
yourself that, miss white lady. I'm just so sorry. I'm
so tired. I can't imagine how tired y'all our thanks again.

Speaker 3 (01:20:00):
Baby. When I say tired, David just got on here
talking and we will see.

Speaker 1 (01:20:12):
My good God impromptus Dragon, thank you so much.

Speaker 2 (01:20:19):
Can I see your coffee cup? It looks like mine mine,
It probably well probably have similar ones. This was I'm
not afraid to admit, but this was before. For some
people is actually their corner store, so they have nowhere
else around like crazy love you mean it, that's what

(01:20:39):
this this is. But this is before the before uh
Bubba had bought me this cup and never gave it
to me, so I.

Speaker 5 (01:20:46):
And it's still like sitting over there in the in
the can right now record got a whole set? Yeah,
so what the Christmas?

Speaker 3 (01:20:59):
Wow?

Speaker 2 (01:20:59):
That's crazy? Please sing that neon da O seven. Riley Gaines,
a swimmer, husband is facing deportation back.

Speaker 3 (01:21:07):
In the UK. Mm hmm, I gotta look it up
because deportation. Who's just your AnyWho y'all were at the
end of the show.

Speaker 2 (01:21:23):
Please if you can, if you heard about my situation,
your girl is out of a job, but she is
still she still got Jesus in her heart.

Speaker 5 (01:21:32):
Amen, and that's you know it.

Speaker 2 (01:21:34):
May listen, Jesus paid it all, but I'm still down
here trying to pay it all. So so I just
need you guys to please if you can help me
pay a bill, help me get it is May first,
May second, No, we are actually on May third now
that needs to be paid. If you can, please head
over to my cash app. That is Becca's voice on

(01:21:56):
cash App. Becca's voice on cash App. That would be
helpful to me. I need to make enough to make
sure I keep this rip over my head for another
thirty one maybe twenty eight days all right, but and
my birthday is on May fifteenth.

Speaker 3 (01:22:09):
So just like mama, I am.

Speaker 2 (01:22:13):
You know you could definitely help support with that as well.
I'll be dropping a video on this coming week. I
think I actually want to change the subject. I want
to do it on ever since been just showed this video.
So my wheels got to turn in for this white
lady and the black baby and the funding of racism
and pushing them forward to become little next Kyle writing

(01:22:33):
writing houses written houses that got that name wrong.

Speaker 3 (01:22:36):
It's too white. But I really really really could use
the support. I'm not feeling the show. What y'all got.

Speaker 5 (01:22:50):
Yes, Happy birthday, Mama, Happy Birthday?

Speaker 1 (01:22:53):
Back up?

Speaker 5 (01:22:54):
I mean they'll see you before then, I say.

Speaker 2 (01:22:55):
Yeah, absolutely, because I ain't got no where to go.
I'm right here, baby, in the fame of Jesus.

Speaker 3 (01:23:05):
All right, y'all, I'll.

Speaker 2 (01:23:05):
See you guys on the next episode. We might do
one impromptu since I am still here at the house.
You don't got nothing to do, so we probably doing
an impromptu this upcoming week midweek, depending on who's available. Uh.
And then we will definitely see you on next Saturday,
right before Mother's Day. And I am reminding you from
those of you guys who don't remember, next Saturday is
the Saturday before Mother's Day.

Speaker 3 (01:23:26):
That Sunday, this mother Okay for you, love you, by y'all.

Speaker 2 (01:23:35):
The work that we're doing here is not going to
stop when it comes to these type of discussions. It's
gonna be for us and by us here on this
platform when the media is telling us to look the
other way. Your support is what helps us move forward.
Join pictureon dot com forward slash cyke it or not.

Speaker 3 (01:23:50):
Help us grow.

Speaker 5 (01:24:03):
Back that start this jeamp shows something like this.

Speaker 2 (01:24:16):
Camp show.

Speaker 5 (01:24:18):
We're records are it's in the house. You know, she
got a funny story to tell, talking politics, culture, A
real life being Spunk. I live a life in the
Atlas me
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