Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
>> Chip (00:07):
I think so.
>> Teacup (00:10):
I'm ready.
>> Producer (00:11):
Were you born ready?
>> Teacup (00:13):
No. It took me a while
to get ready.
>> Chip (00:17):
There's a line from cars somewhere in there. And it came into
my head, and then I lost it instantly.
>> Teacup (00:22):
That's right. I was gonna say I had to change my outfit five times.
I was so unready.
>> Producer (00:29):
I got a little concerned. I didn't know what.
Okay.
>> Teacup (00:34):
I thought we were going. I'm ready, you know? Are you ready?
No, I.
>> Chip (00:38):
Have you seen that trend on TikTok about the women, um,
choosing the bear
on missions?
>> Announcer (00:47):
They called him
teacup.
>> Teacup (00:56):
Listen here.
Cause I got some. Some shit to tell you.
>> Announcer (01:01):
Now he's telling the boys
what he knows.
>> Chip (01:06):
Wait, what?
>> Announcer (01:10):
This is teacup talks?
>> Teacup (01:19):
Yeah, man. Of course I have.
Of course I have. And, you
know, honestly, I think I told you I was
in Tennessee recently, and I saw a bear.
>> Chip (01:33):
Would you choose that bear?
>> Teacup (01:35):
You want to hear something wild, dude?
>> Chip (01:37):
Sure.
>> Teacup (01:38):
Where the bear was roaming around. I had my
son and his cousin
fetching something. Because I was down off of this
balcony. I was staying on. I, uh, dropped something, and I. So I had my son and
his cousin go fetch it, and there's, like, little wood line
off this balcony.
>> Chip (01:53):
You were gonna sacrifice your son
to the bear so that you didn't.
>> Teacup (01:58):
Well, when I sent. Listen, listen. When I sent him
down there, I had not seen a bear.
So it was all good. He came back in and all that stuff. Sometime
later, there was a bear roaming around down there. It was
wild.
>> Chip (02:11):
The bear probably wouldn't have cared, to be honest. Most of the time, they just kind of look
at you and they're like, uh, you're fine. Unless, uh, it's a polar bear. Polar
bears will mess with you, so.
>> Teacup (02:19):
Well, this is why I say that story, because that bear
didn't give two shits about me. I was
like, hey. I mean, it was majestic
looking. I wanted a nice picture. But you can only get that
if you can get to look over in your direction.
>> Chip (02:33):
You called a bear to try and get it to come look at
you.
>> Teacup (02:37):
Um, I wasn't calling it over. I was just wanting to get its
attention. But like I was saying, it
didn't give a fuck about me. It just kept
going.
>> Chip (02:47):
Anyways, different bear that we're talking
about.
>> Teacup (02:51):
Well, we're talking in this question.
It's a. It's a
metaphorical question.
Like, we're not. I don't like. They're not literally. You're not
literally choosing. They're not asking you to choose
between a bear and some Joe schmo.
>> Chip (03:08):
You mean they didn't lock her in a
room?
>> Teacup (03:11):
No, they didn't.
>> Chip (03:13):
Buttons. She gotta push one of the buttons.
>> Teacup (03:14):
No, that's not what they're saying. That's not
what they're saying. There's people getting upset
thinking that's what they're saying when it started.
>> Chip (03:23):
Is just a joke.
>> Teacup (03:24):
No, I don't m. Nah, well, like a.
>> Chip (03:27):
Kind of a joke.
>> Producer (03:28):
To be clear, we are. To be clear,
we are literally choosing the bear, never the
man.
>> Teacup (03:35):
Yeah. Yeah. Um,
so. And especially in my situation, I, like, I
sent. I sent my son down to the bear.
>> Chip (03:46):
I choose the bear just because I see a bear, dude.
>> Teacup (03:48):
Just so, uh, everybody's clear. There was no
bear when I sent my son down into this
wood line. And he's got all his fingers and limbs and
everything. He's good. And now
that's part of his legend.
So there's that.
>> Chip (04:05):
Yeah. He's gonna tell his therapist about that one day that his dad
sent him downstairs into a bear to
go pick something up.
>> Teacup (04:12):
Good. Uh, that'll mean one of two
things. Either my son makes enough money to afford a
therapist, or we have
gone to a system where
health insurance is covered and that is
included. So either way.
Good. Tell them. Tell that
therapist all about me.
>> Chip (04:32):
So it's a good thing that your son's going
to therapy.
>> Teacup (04:36):
You've got to get it out.
>> Chip (04:38):
But listen, that's an episode for later.
>> Teacup (04:41):
Yeah. And we
really should. I would love to,
but, you know, honestly, for me, every episode's therapy.
So back to the question. The
bear or the man? So some dudes getting upset,
like, how dare you. How dare you
(05:02):
not want to be locked in a room with me?
>> Chip (05:08):
Don't you know where I'm a blessing.
>> Teacup (05:09):
To the world, you know? You know, as soon as. As soon
as. That's the approach. Yeah. Uh, I don't want to be locked in a room with
you. You want it too much. Like,
yeah, that's insane.
But like, these
women are telling us
how they feel when
(05:32):
they're, I don't know, walk into their car after
work or, you
know, walking to the store
from their car, you know, just being out.
>> Chip (05:43):
Mhm.
>> Teacup (05:43):
I mean, they're. They're telling us how they feel.
>> Chip (05:47):
A funny little, like, side story to go with that. So.
>> Teacup (05:50):
Hell yeah. I love funny stories that involve women being
terrified of being out and about.
>> Chip (05:55):
So go ahead. Like that. Not like that.
>> Teacup (05:57):
I do have a funny story about that, too. Go ahead.
>> Chip (06:00):
So, you know I just got my haircut, right? Yeah.
The. The woman that cuts my hair.
Um, she's been cutting my hair for years. And
we ran a little bit late because we were talking stuff for so long.
Um, and it was like it had just gotten dark out. It was
maybe 50ft from the door to
the salon there to her car.
(06:20):
And she asked me and my dad, my dad was also getting his haircut
if we could walk with her to her car. And we
kind of were like, oh, she wants to keep talking. You didn't click in
our heads. And eventually she was like, yeah, you know,
a couple days ago, there was a guy that followed me to. I was
like, oh, I didn't even like.
>> Teacup (06:37):
And then it dawned on you became muscle.
>> Chip (06:40):
Yes. It was like, I have a bodyguard now. And we
did. We walked on either side of her to her car.
There were multiple other guys out there that were like, who
are these dudes walking with her? Like, because
they were working the places near. They're like, did
she hire security or something? Because she's not very big
either. So you've got. I thought, honestly, six foot plus
(07:01):
dudes.
>> Teacup (07:01):
Honestly, I thought that that was
gonna be a funny story. I'm saddened by that
story. Cause it's all too funny.
>> Chip (07:08):
Fine, tell your funny story then.
>> Teacup (07:09):
My story is actually funny. Cause I'm an
idiot.
>> Chip (07:13):
Okay, go.
>> Teacup (07:16):
So I used to work in California
and I was at the mall getting myself
a bottle of cologne.
And I, dude, I parked Right, I
got a spot Right next to the entrance. And I
was coming out of the mall, got my cologne.
I'm happy. About to go to the car, I'm
walking and there's a young lady walking in front of
(07:38):
me. And she keeps looking back at
me, all nervous, like. And I'm like, ah.
Ah, fuck.
She thinks I'm like a predator or something.
So, like, I'm thinking about that. I'm
like, I'm no
laughable, you know?
And finally she looks back one more
(08:00):
time to see if I gained on her or something. I don't know.
I can't know what was going on in her mind, but obviously
something because she kept. She looked back like four or
five times maybe. So the last
time she looks back, you know, she looks back and
I said to her, hey, listen, uh,
I don't want to grab you or anything. My car is right there.
(08:23):
Like, she just so happened, she just so
happened to be walking, like, directly towards my
car. And
as soon as I said that, like, to me, it was like. Cause it
was. I was uncomfortable. She kept looking back. I'm feeling
like a predator. Like, she's a victim, and she may have
been a victim in the past. I don't know. I don't know.
(08:43):
I've never been a predator in the past. But she doesn't
know that, you know?
And when I'm in an
uncomfortable situation, I feel uncomfortable. Like, I
feel. I feel uncomfortable that this lady feels uncomfortable.
Like, it's. So I said something stupid,
and I realize now that it was stupid, but it was funny.
(09:04):
Yeah, but it was stupid. Like,
says the predator who's unlocking his door and about to
shove me in his car, you know?
Like, yeah.
>> Producer (09:14):
I think you guys need to understand that the stats are
that 71% of women
have been harassed on the street.
So we do assume from every
man that that's going to happen. And if
we. And we have to learn to deescalate the situation,
because oftentimes it results in physical
violence if we haven't figured out how to de escalate
(09:37):
you. So it's unfortunate for you guys that
aren't going to harass a woman, but
what's safer for the woman? To assume that
she's about to be harassed and attacked, because most
of the time she is. Or to just assume maybe
this is the good one.
>> Chip (09:53):
Well, and on that, like, you know. You know about
the girl at the Dunkin donuts, right? I haven't told him yet,
but part of the reason that I didn't. Okay, so, yeah, tell
me on national donut day. Okay. After work,
I decided to go to Dunkin donuts because it's
national donut day. You should.
>> Teacup (10:09):
So you got a free donut?
>> Chip (10:10):
It was like 530 sort of. Well, no, I did.
Well, normally you wouldn't. So I
ordered a large iced coffee and a.
And one glazed doughnut. I pull up to the window
and drop dead gorgeous
woman opens, uh, the window, and she's
like, hi, I'm so sorry. We don't have any glazed
donuts. Can I get you something? Um,
(10:33):
something different? And she's explaining all the different
ones that they had.
And to be real, I was not trying to flirt or anything. I really
just didn't want to pick. And I was like, oh, you can choose
for me. You can pick for me. And she kind of looked at me and
smiled, was like, are you sure? I was like, yeah, no problem. You can
pick. So she comes back and
(10:53):
do you know what my favorite cookie is? It's an
addiction, actually.
>> Teacup (10:59):
Is it the chocolate chip?
>> Chip (11:00):
No, no, no. Snickerdoodle. Anything with cinnamon
is my, like, my thing.
>> Teacup (11:05):
I know what that makes sense.
>> Chip (11:06):
She comes back with a,
um. It was some, like, chocolate thing, and
then underneath it was no lie. A snickerdoodle
donut. How? I don't know how. If she
knew it, if she just looked at me, was like, yeah, this is what this dude
likes. Um, or if it was her favorite or whatever.
But then she and I talked for a few minutes, and in the back
(11:26):
of my head, I was like, okay, don't come off creepy. Don't come off creepy. Because I
was like, I want to, you know, talk to her. There's
no one behind me in line. It's 530 at a dunkin donut.
So nobody's going to dunkin.
>> Teacup (11:37):
Um, I'm actually surprised you did. I tell my, uh,
youngest daughter loves to go to dunkin donuts, and she always tries to get
me in the afternoon, and I say, we do not eat afternoon
donuts.
>> Chip (11:46):
Oh, no, it's special occasion only. National
donut day, man.
>> Teacup (11:49):
I'll give me a pass.
>> Chip (11:51):
Um, but, you know, while I was
talking to her, I was
paranoid that I was coming off as, like, because I,
you know, my mom's told me about a lot of this stuff,
and I
kind of shut the conversation down early
because I thought I was like, maybe I'm
going, like, maybe it seems bad, you
(12:13):
know, because I know they look out
for that, and I don't want that to, like, I don't want to freak her
out, you know?
>> Teacup (12:20):
And, uh. So, like. And this is going to be a problem,
too, later on, because we're going to have
a whole generation of dudes
who can't talk to women
correctly or without being a
scumbag or trying
to show them their dick or something they want to see. Dick pic.
You know, like, um.
(12:43):
You know, if you can't. If
you can't be comfortable enough to have a conversation
without. See, you're a nice dude. Why.
Why would you ever assume that you would
say anything off color?
>> Chip (12:58):
Not like that, but it's more of, you
know, they look out for it so much
that it. All it would take for them to, you know, get
freaked out would be, you know. You know me. I
say the wrong word a lot when I mean something completely.
>> Teacup (13:12):
I think you. I think you're building it up too much, Manda.
>> Chip (13:15):
Well, and, like, I've had experiences in the past
where, you know, women thought
that I was, you know, double speaking or
something when really I was just trying to be nice, you know?
>> Teacup (13:27):
Yeah, man, I'm gonna be honest with you. When,
you know. Cause, like, all right. So where I'm
from, people aren't, like, openly nice.
Uh, hey, good morning, man. How you doing? They don't do that.
And if people are talking to you, it's usually like, you
know, maybe they got a problem with you or something. So it's
weird. That would suck. No, it's fine. I know.
(13:47):
Nobody bothers you. It's nice. Everybody minds their own friggin business.
You go about your day, it's nice.
>> Chip (13:52):
But then everyone's angry.
>> Teacup (13:53):
No, they're not angry. They're just. They're just minding their own business, going
about their day. Don't be in your head about that, either. Not angry.
And a lot of them are really nice people. They're just doing their
thing. But see, like,
we're doing our thing. You're doing your thing.
Talking to this young lady here.
Forget that dude. I went to Ohio. Nicest
(14:15):
people. They say, hey, hi to everybody.
Everybody. Hey, how you doing? Good morning. I'm, like,
thinking everybody's plotting on me. You know,
like. Like they're, like, gonna get me
somehow.
>> Chip (14:27):
Stalling for their buddy to come. You.
>> Teacup (14:29):
I don't know what the fuck's going on, but, see, like, that's what we're doing. We're
training ourselves to not
be able to talk to women. So, like, let's not be
overboard, you know?
And, uh, like, honestly, I think
if somebody's uncomfortable, they'll tell you, like, this young lady that
I happened to
(14:50):
be behind. And it was a good
distance, too. Um, you know, I did try
to gain on her, but she was quick. She was
so fast. Them little legs are
going Mandev. Uh, jeez,
no.
>> Producer (15:05):
Uh, you know, maybe you're from
Rhode island.
>> Teacup (15:09):
Yeah.
>> Producer (15:10):
Okay. For a decade. It. Things like
harassment and the, uh, photos of our skirt and
indecent exposure following us, groping us.
That's been illegal in that state for a
decade. So maybe that's why the women in that state are a little
more comfy.
>> Teacup (15:25):
Well, I don't know.
>> Chip (15:26):
It's not illegal here.
>> Teacup (15:27):
What?
>> Producer (15:28):
Probably not here in what? I'll look it up for you. Probably not here in the state
of Florida following us. If it is,
a whole lot more men need to be in jail.
>> Chip (15:36):
But that's the other thing. Like, you know,
how can you prove that someone was, like, following
you?
>> Teacup (15:43):
I think that's pretty, um,
evident, you know? Like. So in the
example that I gave, the funny story,
um, it appeared. But we
were both walking towards our own respective
vehicles in a huge parking lot. By
happenstance, we happened.
(16:03):
I happened to be proceeding behind her. I don't want to say
followed anymore. Uh, I was
preceding her and, you
know, obviously I'm no longer
following you. When I get in my car and I drive a completely
opposite direction of you and
it turned out that way. Now, that
(16:24):
would have sucked if we had to go in the same direction.
>> Chip (16:27):
Imagine if your cars were right next to each other, too.
That would have been so awkward.
>> Teacup (16:32):
Nah, I said what I said. I mean, and
just so you know.
>> Producer (16:36):
We appreciate, we do appreciate it. When the guy is like,
I'm not following you. I'm going to my car. Even though the odds are
still there that the person could be following us, they're
less.
>> Teacup (16:44):
I was so. I was, I was so
offended, uh.
>> Producer (16:50):
That she would think that of you.
>> Teacup (16:51):
Yeah, well, she doesn't know me. What an idiot I am for, you
know, and I'm being serious. I'm saying as a joke,
but I was, like, offended.
>> Chip (17:00):
Nah, I would just, I wouldn't be offended. I just
feel bad, you know?
>> Teacup (17:04):
No, here's, here's why I'm offended, okay? How dare
she. How dare she think that I'm
so unattractive that I
can't get a woman on normal case.
>> Chip (17:14):
Have you ever heard of a guy named Jeffrey Dahmer that a bunch
of.
>> Teacup (17:17):
Girls, like, love he wasn't
attractive.
>> Producer (17:21):
Sure.
>> Teacup (17:22):
Oh, all right. Hey, listen, that's one c. Everybody
has their opinion, Right?
>> Producer (17:26):
Do you think only unattractive men rape women?
>> Teacup (17:29):
See, in my mind and see, that's why it
couldn't have been me.
>> Chip (17:33):
It's the, it's always the guy who lives in his
basement, uh, has a really bad neck,
beard, uh, is about 200
pounds overweight and wears the really thin circle
glasses.
>> Producer (17:45):
It's nothing. It's. It's really not. To answer your question, from
before here in Florida, you have
to willfully, maliciously
and repeatedly follow,
harass, or cyber stalk someone
for that to be illegal.
>> Teacup (18:02):
Yeah, I believe that.
>> Chip (18:04):
So you have to, like, fully be a creep. You can't
be like a.
>> Teacup (18:08):
So listen, what?
>> Chip (18:09):
She's half.
>> Teacup (18:10):
What? Well, what she's telling you is you can
pull up to that Dunkin donuts window about
probably about 15 or 20 more times before it
starts to become a problem.
>> Producer (18:21):
I know I'm more involved in this episode than I
have been before and will be in others, but I'm a woman, and this
is. So I have to ask you, what
would you have a woman do if the majority
of the time we are being harassed in the street,
if one in five of us or one in four, depending on where you get your
stats, has been raped or somebody has
attempted to rape us. What, what should
(18:43):
we do? Should we not be assuming for our own
safety that if somebody's following us in a parking lot, we're about
to get hurt?
>> Chip (18:50):
I got, I've got a solution.
>> Teacup (18:51):
So.
>> Chip (18:51):
Concealed carry?
>> Teacup (18:53):
No. Uh, yeah, I like it.
>> Producer (18:55):
Some of us do.
>> Teacup (18:56):
I like, I like that. I like that.
But that's also kind of dangerous, too, sometimes, and we won't talk
about that here in a second. But, um. Um.
>> Producer (19:05):
You have daughters, TK.
>> Teacup (19:06):
I do definitely have daughters. So
I said I was offended
because I'm not. I'm not like that in the moment. I was. I
was because I'm not that type of person. But again, I
say she does not know
me. She doesn't know that I'm not that type
of person. I rationalize that after the fact, you
(19:26):
know, but m. Um,
so everything she was doing,
looking back and checking. Hell yeah.
Matter of fact, if I was her, I would have said something to
me, you know? You know, cuz
obviously my presence made her uncomfortable.
Although, I mean, she would have, I would have said something
(19:48):
stupid back to her, like, God, lady, you
know, think, think highly of yourself, don't we?
I'm just trying to go to my car, you know, like, I would have
said something stupid too, but.
All right, here's, here's an example. So I have, I'm
a 17, um, year old daughter
who recently
went on a plane trip to Ohio.
(20:11):
And she was by herself. First time she's flown by
herself. So,
like, in you, I'm sure you've seen stuff like
this. Maybe once he's seen stuff like this where, you know,
the young lady's on the plane and some shithead is
like, jerking off or.
>> Producer (20:28):
I haven't seen it. I've experienced it.
>> Teacup (20:33):
On the plane, dude, on the plane.
>> Producer (20:35):
I don't you guys properly understand how much we are
harassed on the plane, dude,
everywhere. Grocery store, Walmart, target
parking lot, library, everywhere.
>> Teacup (20:48):
Listen, I. Listen, hold on.
>> Chip (20:51):
Where are the dudes that are doing this? Because, uh,
as far as I know, I don't know any of
these dudes. So I'm like, uh, where are these dudes
at?
>> Teacup (21:00):
See, these are sly bastards.
>> Chip (21:02):
And how are there so many of them? 70%.
How, how. If you're, if it's a one to one ratio,
right, how are 70% of dudes,
right like this? And yet, as far as I can
tell, I'm not meeting these.
>> Teacup (21:15):
I mean, we're starting, we're starting to become okay with it.
>> Producer (21:18):
That would be because only 25 out of
1000 perpetrators end up in prison for.
So there's no consequence.
>> Chip (21:26):
I know, but I'm like, where are these dudes at? Where are these creeps
at?
>> Teacup (21:29):
Or if there is a consequence, it's usually like a very
mild one. Mhm. Because given the crime,
right.
>> Chip (21:35):
I feel like the majority of guys
aren't like this. And I feel like
at the same time, the majority of guys
would hold each other accountable because we tend to
hold each other accountable for a bunch of other stuff.
>> Teacup (21:49):
All right, so, uh, sorry.
>> Producer (21:52):
Ah, you let your daughter go, so let me.
>> Teacup (21:55):
We're gonna hit back on that because I got something for that too.
So let my daughter go on the plane. You know,
she's on the plane. Let her. She's going to Ohio, she's gonna see
her family. And, um,
I told her, I'm like, babe,
do me a favor. It's a
short flight. It is a short flight thing. It's only like two and a
(22:16):
half hours. I said, don't fall asleep.
You can stay awake for the flight.
And if somebody does something weird,
be real loud whilst
ridiculing that fucker. Tell
the whole plane that his tiny little pecker,
you know, do, like, do something. Embarrass the
(22:37):
fuck out of him, like, or her. Cause women
do this shit too, but embarrass the fuck out
of that person, you know? I
mean, m, um, um. And
then try to remember what they look like and
where they go. And then tell
me
what, what I, what I want to know is. What I
(22:59):
want to know is, is like,
how there are, you know, because for
every daughter, you know,
woman that gets sexually assaulted or raped, for every
one of them, there is most certainly a dad.
>> Producer (23:15):
Mm hmm.
>> Chip (23:16):
Mm mhm hmm.
>> Teacup (23:16):
Where the fuck is the dad?
>> Producer (23:19):
Hey, he probably did many of these things
as well.
>> Teacup (23:22):
Let's find, let's find out. What's the
percentage of women that are sexually assaulted?
What's the percentage of women that know their
attacker?
>> Producer (23:35):
I think it's like eight out of ten.
>> Teacup (23:37):
Yeah, it's gonna be something ridiculous.
>> Chip (23:38):
Most of the time, they know who the. It's someone close to
them.
>> Teacup (23:42):
Yeah. I say babe. I say
babe, you tell me.
And
like we're gonna do that.
>> Producer (23:53):
Uh, more than 90% of rape and sexual assault
victims know their attacker as of
2018 from the BBC.
>> Teacup (24:02):
That's, that's fucking insane.
And, and I think once he was trying to allude to
the fact that a lot of times it is the
father or uncle or
some weird connection
or. Or some male friend that they've been a lifelong
friend. Incel fucker. That's, you know.
(24:22):
You know, I've been your friend for ten years. It's about time I got
some. You know what is?
>> Producer (24:28):
I bought you dinner, and therefore you owe me some.
>> Teacup (24:30):
What? Well, yes.
>> Producer (24:33):
All the time.
>> Teacup (24:34):
Sometimes dinners are expensive.
>> Producer (24:36):
I will hurt you right here.
>> Teacup (24:38):
I'm just kidding.
>> Chip (24:39):
You are within throwing.
>> Teacup (24:41):
I know. I'm scared.
>> Producer (24:42):
That's why we've had to learn to say, I'll pay for myself.
Thank you. Simply so that there can
be no confusion that we might owe you sex because you
paid us. Paid for dinner or a movie
ticket or.
>> Chip (24:55):
Okay. How can we hold each other accountable better for this
stuff? That's crazy. Hold on.
>> Producer (25:01):
I would love for you guys to figure that out. Every
woman in this country, on this planet would love
for you guys to figure out how to hold yourselves accountable.
Because there is a reason that we literally, not metaphorically, we
literally would rather be alone with a bear in the
woods than a man.
>> Chip (25:16):
Cause, like, we have. There is a code, Right?
Like, one of the things is if you
do it with a kid, done,
you're. You're done, right?
>> Teacup (25:27):
Like, well, that code
slipping, isn't it?
>> Chip (25:31):
Is it?
>> Teacup (25:32):
Oh, yeah.
>> Chip (25:33):
What?
>> Teacup (25:34):
Listen to me. When. When
you are a
personality of
some level of fame,
and you're talking about when you're
30, how you're gonna
pluck you, a 15 year old who's
just ripe and sweet
(25:55):
and you still have a following,
and you still have support,
notoriety.
>> Producer (26:03):
I mean, Seinfeld's girlfriend was 17.
He's still. Seinfeld, still has a huge following, had a huge
hit show. And his girlfriend, I think her name was
Shoshana, 17,
um, every nine minutes in this country, the
sexual assault victim is a child. It's
not just the famous doing it.
>> Teacup (26:22):
Dude, did you see. Hold on. This was fucking
wild. Donald Trump was in an
interview and with Fox and
friends. I don't even
want to call them. They're not journalists. Um,
Fox and friend folk. And they
were like that.
>> Producer (26:39):
We're gonna call him that from that. Fox and friend folk. I like that.
Sorry. Go ahead.
>> Teacup (26:42):
Well, I don't. They're not journalists, but I'm not. I don't want to
be too nasty. Um,
they were asking him, you know, if he would
declassify this release. That.
And he was saying, yeah, to everything. We're gonna
declassify the Clintons and we're gonna
declassify the Obama. Whatever bullshit they're gonna
(27:04):
declassify, they said. What about the Epstein files?
Oh, well, uh, uh, well, I don't know. We're gonna have to look at
that. Uh, uh, you know, cuz there's a lot of fake news he's
on. Cuz he's on the fucking list.
So it's gotta be. Oh, uh, yeah, well, you know, some of that's fake.
Just trying to ruin people. Well, of course it is, Donald.
>> Chip (27:22):
And we let that guy in the White House.
>> Teacup (27:24):
Let him. He's gonna get like, he's
gonna get like 48% of the vote. 47% of the
vote.
>> Producer (27:32):
So answer your own question. How do you guys hold yourselves accountable?
>> Teacup (27:35):
We can't.
>> Chip (27:37):
We make tasks.
>> Teacup (27:38):
How do you do it?
>> Chip (27:39):
That dude, we hunt them down.
>> Teacup (27:40):
Listen, that dude literally said, see? And this is, this is
why I said, where are the fathers? Every one of these girls has
a father. Where are the decent men?
And you were alluding to this, where are the decent men that see
this? And I'm gonna go back to this fucker, Donald
Trump. Cause he literally said that he
would walk through the pageants, the changing
rooms of the pageant he
(28:02):
owned, and see all the girls
in various stages of undress. And these are
minor girls. Mhm. And he'd like to do it because
he owned the pageant. He can, uh, I ah,
can.
And people are going, he is going to get
47, 48% of the vote
(28:23):
because we can overlook it. And uh, you
know, part of it is because like, I wouldn't say we
on some level. Now what? No,
we, yeah, we, we're strong. We are a country.
We are one. We're doing that. We're in this together,
buddy. We, we're as strong as our weakest
link. And our, we got a
(28:44):
couple.
>> Producer (28:45):
Well, so there was a book that came out,
and in the book it said that aides at the White
House during the Trump presidency, this is a quote from it.
Aides said that Donald Trump talked about Ivanka
Trump, his own daughter, Ivanka Trump's
breasts, her backside, and what it might be like
to have sex with her. Remarks that
(29:07):
prompted, um, John Kelly, who was a former Trump
official, to remind the president that Ivanka was his
daughter.
>> Teacup (29:14):
All right, I'm gonna take John Kelly's word for it.
>> Producer (29:16):
You say that, where are the dads? I mean, that's a dad talking
about his own daughter.
>> Teacup (29:20):
Oh, yeah, but he's, he doesn't count. No, uh,
no, I said, where are the
decent men?
Where are the dads? That's what I said.
I said, where are they? And just because they may have
children or because they may
have served our country in some fashion
(29:42):
or because of whatever position they hold within
the community, that doesn't mean that they're decent.
Mendez. That doesn't mean just
because you have kids doesn't mean you're a dad. If you
sit idly by and
you let that happen, and you just like,
man, well, he owns the
pageant.
(30:06):
Um. Dude, it would have taken one time. He would have got
slapped one time, and it
could have been by anybody, and he would
have never done it again.
He could have got slapped one time.
>> Producer (30:21):
You're saying if a woman had slapped him, he wouldn't have done it again?
>> Teacup (30:24):
He wouldn't have done it again if somebody would have made a big deal about
it.
>> Producer (30:28):
You understand that the majority of the time that we actually say
that it happened to us were not believed.
>> Teacup (30:33):
That's why I say you got to make a big deal about it.
>> Producer (30:36):
If we make a big deal about it and people don't jump in, he'll
beat us up and kill us.
>> Teacup (30:40):
Well, I was talking about the specific incident where some.
>> Producer (30:43):
On the plane, it was safe. That was very good advice for your daughter because
they're in an enclosed location.
>> Chip (30:48):
Also, there's federal marshals on board.
>> Producer (30:50):
But in a parking lot. In a dark parking
lot. We have to deescalate in the moment,
because, generally speaking, we're
outmanned. Carry and
slapping. Oh, m. No, no, we're not
going to slap, because if we slap, we have escalated, and now
we're going to get beat up.
>> Teacup (31:08):
No, you got a high gouge, right?
>> Producer (31:11):
You do have to learn to hit.
>> Teacup (31:12):
The wind, I'm telling you. And. And then. And then something like
that, you know, you. Self
defense is important. Self defense. I don't
care if you go take some boxing
classes. Jiu jitsu is really popular.
Um, karate,
krav maga is popular. There's a lot of
(31:33):
things that are popular. I don't recommend. A lot of people got pepper spray. I don't
recommend pepper spray because you end up eating some of it yourself.
>> Producer (31:39):
But maybe rather than us having to fight men off, men
stop being need. Men stop being sources
that need to be fought off of us.
>> Teacup (31:47):
I know. I wish, uh, here's the thing.
Uh, I wish that could be so.
>> Producer (31:52):
What are you guys experiencing in your worlds that
is making you think this is okay? I mean, uh, you guys are not like
this, but I'm legitimately asking because you guys have grown up as men.
>> Teacup (32:01):
This is what I'm the only thing.
>> Chip (32:02):
I can think of is there are certain celebrities that people
do follow and people that, like, I'm not one that really
cares about celebrities very much, but I know that people that
do, and I guess if they look at them as role
models.
>> Teacup (32:14):
This scumbag I was talking about is Nick Fuentes.
>> Chip (32:17):
Like that, or, um, Andrew Tate.
>> Teacup (32:19):
I was about to say he's a scumbag.
>> Chip (32:21):
There's that other guy. Um, does
he.
>> Teacup (32:24):
Nobody says this.
>> Chip (32:25):
Oh, nobody.
>> Teacup (32:26):
Nobody will call.
>> Producer (32:27):
Men don't say, women tell each other.
>> Teacup (32:29):
Yeah, you guys are saying it, but you know what's out? You know what else is
sad? There is a woman
somewhere who. If Andrew Tate was
like, hey, come on, let's go. You're gonna hang out with
me tonight. There is a woman somewhere that would be attracted
to his money and his status
and, you know, whatever that may. His status is
(32:50):
soon gonna be convicted felon, incarcerated, probably.
>> Producer (32:53):
We're not, uh, generally attracted. It's that we're abuse victims
ourselves and have, like. Like what you were talking about with your wife
earlier, before we went on air about, if dad
teaches daughter that the person who's supposed to
love you is abusive or harsh or critical
or controlling, then daughter
internalizes the message of, the man who loves me is
supposed to be like that. So that's what they go find,
(33:15):
isn't Andrew Tate.
>> Teacup (33:19):
I say, those ladies.
>> Chip (33:21):
Those ladies so be better dads. That's what I'm hearing.
That's if I'm even going to be.
>> Teacup (33:27):
You know. But these women make it so hard for us to be better
dads,
you know? Yeah.
>> Producer (33:33):
We're so hard when we're five years old and precocious.
>> Teacup (33:37):
Well, the anger stems with the wife.
>> Producer (33:40):
Oh, sure.
>> Teacup (33:41):
It's all the wife and the moms.
Yeah.
>> Producer (33:45):
Think about the. The men that you served with.
>> Teacup (33:47):
See, and I, uh. So I was. I was. I was thinking about
this when we were talking about show ideas and all that
stuff, and I was thinking about this,
and like you said, do I know
anybody that's, like, a shithead like this?
The answer is no, I don't. I don't.
>> Chip (34:04):
I can think of one. The one that works with me
that, you know.
>> Teacup (34:08):
Yeah, well, that would. Yeah, yeah, for sure.
>> Chip (34:10):
But still, like, you know, if. If
70% of women. Right. Is it
that 70% of.
>> Teacup (34:18):
It's not 70% of men doing this.
>> Chip (34:20):
So it's like 10% doing it?
>> Teacup (34:22):
Uh, yeah, well, I don't know if not even 10%.
I. You know, it may be. It may be more. And then,
like, you also have to like,
you have to understand, like, some of these things. Like
what? What is sexual assault? You know?
Define that.
>> Chip (34:39):
I don't know.
>> Teacup (34:40):
I'm gonna be honest with you.
>> Chip (34:42):
Mm mhm hmm.
>> Teacup (34:43):
You know, I'm an ally. Yeah,
I'm an ally, man. We were talking about the gay pride and all
that. Um. I dig it,
man. I'm cool with all that.
But I had a gay dude grab me by the pee pee once.
I didn't like it.
>> Chip (35:01):
I can say the most. You have a talent of saying
the, like, most awful thing, but
making it hilarious.
>> Producer (35:08):
Okay, so to clear it up for everyone, the term
sexual assault literally means any
non consensual sexual act
prescribed by federal, tribal, or state law,
including when the victim lacks capacity to.
So if the victim is drunk or.
>> Teacup (35:25):
The victim is unconscious, and then you'll have a dude
that say, well, I was drunk too, man. Uh, here's
the thing. And you can say that
it's not gonna fly. It's not
gonna fly.
>> Producer (35:37):
What's not gonna fly?
>> Teacup (35:38):
If you're drunk and she's drunk. Like,
so that's. I don't. I don't think. I don't think alcohol or anything
like that. Like, I'm thinking of like, why guys would do
this.
>> Chip (35:48):
Well, if you're both drunk.
>> Producer (35:50):
Mm mhm hmm.
>> Teacup (35:52):
I don't know, dude. Like, you know, it's so funny.
>> Producer (35:55):
How about you guys be so responsible that you don't
get so drunk that you rape a woman? Uh, there's an idea.
>> Chip (36:00):
I've also never been drunk.
>> Producer (36:02):
You're correct. You have. But starting to excuse
it of. Well, he was drunk.
>> Teacup (36:07):
Well, that is.
>> Producer (36:09):
That means that we should never, ever be around
any male that has had anything to drink.
Because now he has license to rape or assault us because
he'll just say he was drinking.
>> Teacup (36:18):
You know what that is?
>> Producer (36:19):
You just killed the bar industry in the US, Chip.
>> Teacup (36:22):
You know what that is? It's a sausage fest and
nobody wants to be at that. Unless of course, you're gay and you're into that thing.
But, um. Um.
So I just say, you know, how about. How about
you get drunk and you do it like most
drunk people do and just pass out and
then you just. Oh, uh.
(36:42):
You ever have a wet dream?
>> Chip (36:44):
No.
>> Teacup (36:45):
Those aren't bad. Try one of those.
You know, you don't. You don't
rape, you know,
or attempt to rape, or attempt to rape.
Just get your wet drink.
>> Producer (37:19):
I have a question for you guys. You said that you both know a guy.
>> Teacup (37:22):
I think if I focus hard enough you can. Well, yeah,
go ahead. What?
>> Producer (37:26):
You said that you both know a guy who would do this.
>> Chip (37:29):
I work with him. Yeah.
>> Producer (37:31):
Okay.
>> Teacup (37:31):
So, I mean, I don't. Listen, I'm gonna say this.
I don't know that he would do this.
>> Chip (37:36):
Oh, no, I know. He's told, he's told stories about doing
stuff.
>> Teacup (37:40):
Well, he's a scumbag anyways, but.
>> Chip (37:42):
And he told it as if it was a conquest. And we all kind of were looking
at him like you're like, did anybody say
anything?
>> Teacup (37:48):
No. No.
>> Chip (37:49):
Because we don't want to fight each.
>> Producer (37:50):
Other doing it to more winners.
>> Chip (37:53):
Why?
>> Teacup (37:53):
That's not true.
>> Chip (37:54):
You bring.
>> Teacup (37:54):
That's not true. Don't say we don't want to fight each
other, cuz all you had to do
was listen. I, I told you about that dude. Oh,
I hope he listens to my show. I told you about that dude.
>> Chip (38:05):
Oh, I'll tell him. M about.
>> Teacup (38:06):
If you would have, if you listen. If, if
he would have started saying all that reckless shit. Because here's what
happens. Some gullible motherfucker in
that, that class, which is an
awful setting to be having this
conversation, but some gullible
motherfucker is going to be like, he did it.
(38:27):
They. Mhm. Seem to be pretty cool with
it. I am
having a hard time getting it on my own.
Guess I'll go with taking mhm. You
know what I'm saying? I told you
guys a story about
somebody. Um,
um, you know, my wife and I,
(38:50):
we didn't have a lot of money when we were younger, and
so our date nights were like sitting in the fucking back of the pickup truck,
just shooting the shit, smoking a cigarettes, drinking a beer.
We had neighbors that used to hang out. My
kids used to play together and all that stuff. One
night they were hanging out with us and the
wife. I don't know how the conversation got
(39:10):
started, but the wife started talking all this reckless stuff
about not being able to date black people because,
you know, her daddy would kill her and all this
stuff. She didn't say black people, though. She said something
different and I
didn't say anything. My wife and I looked at each
other like, this shit is crazy, m cause we don't talk like
that. I didn't say
(39:32):
nothing to those folks. You know what those folks are
doing right now? Walking around
talking to other folk about how
they could never date a black person. Using
a different word, though,
and bringing in new folks to the
fold. Now, she didn't get me
(39:55):
right, but she's gonna get somebody else
so we have to say something. So now,
right? And I told you guys this because I think we've ran
into a situation where somebody was using that kind of language in front of me, and I
didn't really like it very much today.
>> Chip (40:09):
Mhm.
>> Teacup (40:10):
M. If
you don't say something and
prove that you're not one to stand by unless
something like that happened, it's gonna keep
happening.
>> Producer (40:23):
Mhm.
>> Teacup (40:23):
It's gonna keep happening. Donald Trump says,
I'm gonna grab him. I grab him by the pussy. And they let you.
And then he became our president.
>> Producer (40:34):
People got behind him. They called it locker room talk.
>> Teacup (40:37):
It's locker room talk.
>> Producer (40:38):
Is it locker room talk for you?
>> Teacup (40:41):
First off, I've never heard of first off. That was a
phrasing. The phrasing sounds
like a slack jawed old
man.
>> Chip (40:49):
Yeah.
>> Teacup (40:50):
Phrase
that sounded so ugly
and gross.
>> Chip (40:57):
Okay, Grandpa, go take your pills.
>> Producer (40:59):
Mm mhm. Hmm.
>> Teacup (41:01):
Except he's not taking. The only pill he's taking is
friggin Viagra cialis.
>> Producer (41:06):
You know, we know from stormy that he has to take that,
so.
>> Teacup (41:10):
And nobody says nothing.
Matter of fact, people go vote for them. So we
say to the world,
come to America, we'll grab you by the pussy.
>> Producer (41:23):
Mm hmm.
>> Teacup (41:24):
I just. Why not?
>> Producer (41:27):
And then men get offended when we say, well, we
would rather be in the woods with a bear. Because if the
bear attacks us, no one's going to say, well, were
you wearing heels? Did you have red lipstick on? Was your shirt
low cut? The bear didn't really attack you. You
probably did it to yourself. None of those things are going to happen.
We're safer with the bear. And at least if the bear attacks us,
(41:47):
people will believe it was the bear.
>> Teacup (41:50):
So you said 70?
>> Producer (41:52):
Well, 70, um, 1% of women have
been harassed on the street.
>> Teacup (41:59):
I mean, I'd love to do the math on this. And like, in my own
experience, as I've said,
actually, I've encountered two bears
in my Life.
>> Chip (42:08):
That's it.
>> Teacup (42:10):
From the city. Bastard. Uh, don't do that.
>> Chip (42:11):
Oh, my God.
>> Producer (42:13):
But again, you're from a state where the act of
harassment is very easily defined and made
illegal. So I wonder if that's what's making such a huge.
>> Teacup (42:21):
See, the women, the women where I'm from, too, like those
city women, they don't play.
>> Producer (42:27):
No, but you can, I mean, go right now.
You'll find videos all over TikTok of New York City women being
catcalled and harassed.
>> Teacup (42:35):
Uh, yeah, but those are, those are the, I'm talking about,
like real city women. Not like
those are uptown women.
>> Producer (42:42):
I was trying to find where the 71% stat came from. That came from the
UN's women. The prevalence and reporting of sexual
harassment in UK public spaces. So I'm sorry, that's in the UK. Let
me see if I can find you a us stat.
>> Chip (42:55):
It's easy. Going to be worse in the US, honestly.
>> Teacup (42:58):
Well, we have a bigger population, so there's going to be
more opportunity.
Yeah.
>> Chip (43:06):
So basically, the moral of this would be,
if you see something, say something.
>> Teacup (43:11):
You know, bro, we have to stamp this out. Yeah.
Like, uh, I'm telling you right
now, if something was to
happen to my daughter, I told my daughter, you. You get loud on the
plane, I said, babe, something might have happened. They might have
touched you, but you're gonna. Everybody is going
to. Something is gonna happen to that fucker
(43:31):
if it happens, like at the store. Matter of fact,
uh, my wife and her were walking,
uh, through a store one day,
and they called me. My wife called
me, said, hey, can you come over here real quick?
There's some guy following us through the
store. Thought he was taking pictures or something. I
(43:53):
don't know, dude. I did. I got to the store, so I
didn't even answer the. I didn't. It was a text.
That's what it was. I didn't even answer the text. Store was pretty
close to my house. Hopped in my car, drove over there.
Um, my daughter was shocked to see me. Like, oh, my God, you got here
quick. Hell, yeah.
Where is he? You know, like, you.
(44:14):
You gotta do that, man. There was.
>> Producer (44:16):
If we don't have a man, we can. I can't tell you how many times I've called friends
and said, you know, if I die tonight, there was this guy, and he was behind me, and
he looked like this. And I. He was this tall, and he's. I'm in this location,
and I'm gonna.
>> Teacup (44:26):
Say, there's something to be said about this. There's an example,
something similar. Not the same, similar.
There's a gentleman, um, and I want to say it was in
Georgia, but he was arrested. Cause
he whooped the shit out of some 18 year old dude
who had dated his daughter
and was saying nasty things about her and all that
(44:46):
stuff. He got arrested cause he whooped the shit
out of this dude. But it was at a high school.
So some dad went to the high
school and defended his daughter, her
honor, you know. Well, we
talk about chivalry's dead.
Which, uh, first off, that's the
(45:07):
stupidest fucking saying, chivalry's dead.
And I know you don't know about chivalry.
>> Chip (45:13):
And then, can you define chivalry?
>> Teacup (45:16):
Because it's a code
of between nights. It's an
honor code between knights.
>> Chip (45:24):
Well, then I would say it is dead, then I don't think we have knights
anymore.
>> Teacup (45:28):
Yeah, but they're talking about, you gotta hold the door. You gotta
open the door. You gotta protect my honor. This man's
trying to, you know, be polite. So here's the
thing. This man did exactly that. That man got
arrested.
>> Producer (45:40):
Multiple fathers have done it, was pulling it up.
Multiple. Some of them have beaten we're boy.
>> Teacup (45:45):
And we're putting, we're putting these men.
>> Chip (45:48):
In jail for doing the
right thing.
>> Teacup (45:51):
For taking care of their family, their, their
children, number one.
And number two,
ridding or.
Because, uh, you know, I hope, I hope
most people can just like, hey, hey, get it. You get a fucking beaten,
you learn your lesson. Maybe you don't walk through the
(46:12):
friggin the changing rooms
anymore, you know,
or whatever. In, uh, some
cases, these, you know, these fathers are like
killing these people. In my
mind, if it's.
If it's for your kid and your kid's risk, their
life's at risk, or that something's going
(46:35):
to be taken from them that can't be given back.
I mean, um, defend. Defend it with your
Life.
>> Producer (46:45):
It's hard not to agree with you.
>> Teacup (46:46):
And you.
>> Producer (46:47):
The court system certainly doesn't help.
>> Teacup (46:48):
Well, I don't give a fuck. Get some family members, put some money
on your books. I want to know that guy's name. That I will
put money on his books.
>> Producer (46:56):
For, uh, real.
>> Teacup (46:58):
It was a. It was a black guy. I think I was in Georgia.
>> Producer (47:01):
Okay, so there was one in the
Raul cologne. C o l o
n. I'm not sure how to say his last name. He was. He
beat his daughter's boyfriend. A Putnam county
man is in jail after his daughter's boyfriend was attacked Saturday
night.
>> Teacup (47:16):
Um, shit. We might, we might just go through and put $50.
>> Producer (47:20):
There's quite a few. Los Angeles, Washington,
Las Cruce.
>> Teacup (47:23):
Like what
we are over here, right?
Putting money into
the funds of a
known sexual
assaulter and now convicted
felon. Meanwhile, there
are brave real men sitting in
(47:46):
jail without any lickies and
chewies. And I say,
I say, let's start a GoFundMe
for all these fellas.
>> Producer (47:55):
Maybe we can add a little to your Patreon.
>> Teacup (47:57):
That's yes.
>> Chip (47:58):
And then, yes, we don't pay our
taxes.
>> Producer (48:01):
Uh, no, we're going to pay our taxes.
>> Teacup (48:03):
Well, we have to pay taxes, buddy.
>> Chip (48:05):
That sucks, man.
>> Teacup (48:05):
No, no, no. You always pay your taxes. Those always come
back to bite you.
>> Chip (48:09):
I had to actually pay my tax. Sorry, that's off topic. Never
mind.
>> Producer (48:13):
He had to pay his taxes for the.
>> Chip (48:14):
It sucked, man. I felt so good about how much
I made you.
>> Producer (48:18):
Like those pretty, pretty streetlights?
>> Chip (48:20):
No, I've got headlights.
>> Teacup (48:21):
That road smooth as hell. That road's smooth as hell, isn't
it?
>> Producer (48:26):
I want to update you. In the US, the 71% number is actually
worse. In a nationally representative United States
online study of 2000 respondents,
77% of women reported
experiencing forms of street harassment.
>> Teacup (48:40):
And that could be. That's like cat calling. That could be anything, right?
I'm not, I'm not. I don't mean to diminish. That's not what I'm
trying to say, but that's like catcalling and stuff like that.
>> Producer (48:48):
That includes cat calling. But seriously, we can't walk to work
without somebody.
>> Teacup (48:52):
Listen, I wasn't trying to diminish it.
>> Chip (48:55):
Can I ask a question?
>> Teacup (48:55):
And sometimes if you phrase it in the form of a question,
never, like.
>> Producer (48:59):
We don't want to hear it. We just don't want to hear
it. Just let us go to work. We don't care what you think of
our ass. We just want to go to work.
>> Teacup (49:07):
Are, uh, those outer space pants?
>> Producer (49:09):
Don't care what you think of what we look
like. Just leave us alone.
>> Chip (49:14):
So you're telling me, like, let's say
I'm at the mall.
>> Producer (49:18):
What? We just want to go to work.
>> Chip (49:22):
I'm at the mall, okay? I'm
with a few of my friends. I see a group of girls over
there, and they're with a, you know, group of their
friends. I see this girl,
I want to go get her number, and I go over there and
I just start the conversation with, hi. I just thought, you're absolutely beautiful,
whatever. And she says no, and
(49:42):
gets uncomfortable with that, which, okay,
I, uh, understand, I'll go mind my own business.
But then, you know, she would go and fill out that
thing and might, you know, thinking back on that, the way that
she saw it, with a preconception of knowing all
these stats and, you know, almost getting in her
own head in that regard.
>> Teacup (50:03):
Like.
>> Chip (50:06):
Wouldn'T that inflate the number then? No,
because I wouldn't think that's, you.
>> Producer (50:10):
Know, I wouldn't say that as harassment. I mean, this
is the other thing, thinking that women don't know when we're being
harassed. We know when it is coming with malicious intentions.
>> Teacup (50:19):
I was gonna say.
>> Producer (50:20):
We're not going to say, oh, that sweet guy came over and was
like, I don't want to bother you or anything. I just saw you, and I think you're
very pretty, and I would love to talk with you, but it's totally okay
if you'd rather not talk with me. That's not what we're talking about when we're
saying that we're getting harassed. But also the fact that
you wonder if it could be. That's also
not a problem of a woman's making. That's your fellow
(50:40):
guys who have created an
environment where it is very difficult for you to approach us,
because the majority of the time, we're being
approached from someone who would cause us
harm if we don't go along.
>> Teacup (50:54):
Listen, m. Let me ask you something. You're a young man,
and, you know, maybe you approach women. I don't. I don't
know, but, like, I don't because
I'm.
>> Chip (51:03):
I'm worried that I will scare
them, you know?
>> Teacup (51:07):
You know what's crazy to me?
>> Producer (51:08):
I mean, you're also six three and.
>> Chip (51:10):
Sorry, I mean that, too. But, uh, it's more.
I think of it as.
>> Teacup (51:15):
You see how I feel sometimes, but I, like. Like, I
go into these conversations, like, knowing what I
look like.
>> Producer (51:24):
You would be somebody I'd run from.
>> Teacup (51:26):
I'm always like, what are you talking about? I'm
very approachable.
>> Producer (51:30):
Your tats, your. Your clearly
strong. I can see muscles. You're, you know, you
look like a guy.
>> Chip (51:36):
Bald head, beard.
>> Teacup (51:38):
I look.
>> Producer (51:39):
Bald head, beard. He looks like somebody who could take a woman
down.
>> Chip (51:42):
He looks like someone who could take a man twice his
size down. Mm hmm.
>> Producer (51:48):
I have no. I believe completely that that
woman in that parking lot was very concerned.
>> Teacup (51:54):
I mean, they would be.
I don't know. But listen, I know I am.
I look like very fine people from one
side of a Charlottesville rally. I
know that. I know that.
Um, and I. Yeah, I also
(52:17):
understand the kind of, like, from
a distance, you know, I, uh, used to be a
baker, and they. We would always say,
you know, before you put something out. Yeah. You say,
oh, how's it look? Yeah. Because we eat with our eyes
first. So
from a distance, looking at me, you know, you're looking at me,
you're like, mandy, I don't know.
(52:40):
I don't know if I want any white supremacist tonight,
you know, so I get that.
But when I'm smiling, I'm like, hey, how's it going, I give you a little
shaka. Not a shocker.
Shocka.
>> Chip (52:53):
That's a new word for me. Add that to my vocabulary.
>> Teacup (52:56):
Well, get hip to a song.
Um.
>> Producer (53:05):
I just. How are we supposed to know the difference?
>> Teacup (53:07):
My wife just threw me off.
>> Producer (53:10):
Your wife came in the room and I love that. Every time she
melts in the room, he just melts. His whole world becomes
her.
>> Teacup (53:16):
She just threw me off.
>> Chip (53:18):
Bastard.
>> Teacup (53:18):
Uh.
>> Producer (53:22):
She just wanted to say goodnight.
>> Teacup (53:24):
Yeah, that's true.
Anyways, um. Yeah, I know what I look
like, but, um, um, you know,
I am. I engage with everybody. You see me? Yeah,
dude, I love, I love talking everybody.
Everybody. And so, like,
I think,
(53:46):
I think, um, part of, part of the reason why we
have these issues now is because a lot of times people don't know how to talk
to people. You know,
we're gaming online, talking to each other like that, telling each
other, lick our balls. And I, you know, we're gonna, we're
gonna fuck your dead mom until, I don't know,
whatever bullshit they're saying.
>> Chip (54:05):
You definitely had an Xbox.
>> Producer (54:07):
Yikes.
>> Teacup (54:08):
And so, yeah, you should listen to some of these
games. He's, these are, these are kids.
And I'll say it. Sometimes I'll be like, hey, I'm gonna go
play some video games. Have a 13 year old tell me how. Um, he's gonna fuck my dead
mother.
>> Chip (54:21):
Yeah.
>> Teacup (54:21):
Until she climaxes. Do you let them,
let them, let them say it. Yeah.
>> Chip (54:26):
Oh, no, you talk back. You. You shoot back.
>> Producer (54:29):
Maybe that's why they think it's okay to do it in real
life.
>> Chip (54:33):
So you gotta shoot back. You can't just take it.
>> Teacup (54:36):
So. But then this is what I mean, man.
>> Producer (54:38):
I think we found the crux of the problem.
>> Teacup (54:39):
Yeah, we. Well, back
to the eight men verbally.
>> Chip (54:44):
Abuse each other and that's.
>> Producer (54:46):
I think we just found the crux of the problem.
Maybe you guys should not do that because then you
take it out of the relationship.
>> Chip (54:53):
That's like asking a man not to be a man.
>> Teacup (54:55):
No, no, you've heard how.
>> Producer (54:58):
Wait, wait, wait. It's a requirement to be a
man. To talk about fucking requires
mothers dead.
You're the problem. We found the call is coming
from inside the house. It's you.
>> Teacup (55:13):
It was so. Listen, it's so weird to hear
one that was
too much, right? Oh, God.
Anyways, uh, uh,
why you shouldn't talk like this.
>> Producer (55:27):
It's different when there's a woman.
>> Teacup (55:31):
I stuff. Listen, if I had an Xbox
control in my hand right now, and we were playing some zombies.
I'd be telling little 13 year old, call me
stepdaddy.
>> Producer (55:43):
But if you don't shut it down there, then the 13 year old grows up.
>> Teacup (55:46):
So here's the thing.
>> Producer (55:47):
Catcalling women on the street, chasing women in parking
lots, and is shocked that she doesn't
respond.
>> Teacup (55:54):
No, no. Uh, like, here's the thing.
>> Chip (55:56):
No, because we're. We are completely different animals around
women.
>> Teacup (55:59):
So he's saying he talks shit back. And that's a
method. That's a method.
I don't use that method.
I don't say anything back. Because you
have to remember these little kids. You
tell them not to pick their nose. What are they doing? Digging for gold?
You tell them if they sit too close to the tv, they'll go
(56:22):
blind. What are they doing? You tell them if they touch it
too much, it's gonna fall off.
You ain't never seen someone go through so many pairs of socks,
you know what I mean? You tell these little kids,
stop talking about my mom and turn my feelings
or fuck your mom, dude.
Like, no, that's just escalates things. It's a.
(56:44):
It's. It's a, um.
It's a. It's. It's just like Facebook or
Instagram or anything like that. There's no
consequences. It's not real.
None of it's real, but it is. And then. Huh?
>> Producer (56:57):
Because they take it out of that world.
>> Teacup (57:00):
We've been in that world for so long that
we are. We are shocked when we hear it and we don't know
what to do. I think that's what it is. I was sitting in the
back of that pickup truck, shocked. Couldn't
believe it. I didn't know these people well enough. I think if they did know me well
enough, they would've known I don't talk like that.
They would have never said it.
>> Producer (57:19):
But contrast how you're handling hearing
teenage boys speak about
women in ways they should not be speaking about women. That if they
said that in real life, you'd call them out on it. You'd be like, that's not
how a man talks. You need to, whatever. Contrast
that with how we women police
ourselves. We get ready to go out,
(57:39):
we're looking each other up and down, of, uh. Are you
covered? Uh. Do you have
something on you that you can protect yourself
with? Don't look at the guy for more than 2
seconds because then he's going to think you're interested. Keep your hand over
your drink. Don't accept any drink that you haven't seen. Made
that hasn't left your hand. Like, we're preparing
each other. And if any of us gets out of line
(58:01):
and does something that heightens the danger,
then we are teaching each other. So we're over here
teaching each other to stay
safe from the environment you guys are
perpetuating. Listening to 13 year old boys
talking about fucking dead mothers.
>> Teacup (58:17):
Oh, man.
>> Producer (58:18):
Sorry. And not saying to that, boy, what is wrong
with you? That's not how a man talks. I don't know who told you that was
okay, but it's really not. Man, be a real man. Don't
talk like that. Like, why don't you say that?
>> Chip (58:29):
Well, that sounds silly.
>> Teacup (58:31):
Yeah.
>> Chip (58:31):
Yeah.
>> Teacup (58:31):
Cause I like silly to tell a
way.
>> Chip (58:35):
The way you just said that, that's
obviously.
>> Teacup (58:38):
This kid's not really gonna fuck my dad.
>> Producer (58:40):
Come on, man.
>> Teacup (58:41):
It's not physically possible.
>> Chip (58:42):
Don't talk to me like that.
>> Teacup (58:43):
Well, it is.
>> Producer (58:44):
I'm not saying to take offense and say you can't talk to me like that. I'm
saying that in your manhood as a man.
>> Chip (58:49):
Cool, man.
>> Teacup (58:50):
Hey, let me ask.
>> Producer (58:51):
That's why.
>> Teacup (58:52):
That's why we're choosing the bear, because I
agree. Let me ask you something. Choose the fucking bear.
I agree. Let me ask you something. I
told somebody you were there
not to use then word in front of me.
I don't like it now, I felt bad
because I didn't say it then. I should have said it then.
(59:12):
I didn't. This is gonna go to what you're saying, I
hope. What happened?
When I said, don't say that?
>> Chip (59:22):
He. If I remember correctly, he said something
like, who are you to be telling me?
>> Teacup (59:26):
He tried to argue back, right?
>> Chip (59:28):
Yeah.
>> Teacup (59:30):
And then I got a little upset.
And when I got a little upset, I mean,
did he say the word again? Did anybody in that room,
because he had a partner in crime with that bullshit,
did that partner in crime come to his
rescue or vice versa?
>> Chip (59:47):
Nope.
>> Teacup (59:48):
Nope. Did any of you other ones that had
nothing to do with it come to their rescue?
>> Chip (59:53):
No.
>> Teacup (59:54):
No. There was nobody there to help
them.
So when we see this, we hear this.
I mean, I can't say I don't like the n word and then listen to you say
it and be like, eh, uh. You know,
he knows I don't like it. But
if. If I say I'm telling you
(01:00:16):
or tell you about my daughter, like, I got to tell her, hey,
get on the plane, don't go to sleep. All that bullshit. What do you
think I tell my son? Well, I got tell my son.
The same thing, cuz weird shit happens to these young men,
too.
>> Producer (01:00:29):
Mhm.
>> Teacup (01:00:29):
But I
gotta tell him, don't be an asshole.
Like, give this girl some space or something, you
know, you gotta think. I
try to tell my son, you gotta think, man. Like,
some asshole probably follows her home
one night, you know? That's why she was weird with
(01:00:49):
me when I was walking to my car.
So, yeah, while it was weird, she kept looking back at me,
my son. I mean, don't be
the dude that friggin goes and does something to make a
woman feel uncomfortable. And it's easy to understand which.
Which of those things are weird, you
know, if you. If you can't
(01:01:10):
understand, like, you're not wanted somewhere.
And I think maybe that might be part of the problem, too, but I don't.
I don't know. I think you're right.
>> Producer (01:01:18):
That's a huge.
>> Chip (01:01:19):
There definitely is a problem.
>> Producer (01:01:21):
Listen, it's not that we don't want to be approached by actual,
honest, good men. That is not the thing. It
is that when you approach a woman, first of all, personal
space. Personal space. You do not need to get
close enough to us to touch us when you don't know us.
And then if we indicate that we're not
interested, we're not interested. It's not. You're not going to change our
minds. Just accept the no and move along.
(01:01:43):
Because the majority of our experiences, if we
do indicate that we're not interested, well, here it
comes even harder.
>> Teacup (01:01:51):
It's like I tell you guys all the time, whenever you guys don't do something, I do,
or you're not paying attention to me or something, I said hi, you don't
say hi back, I guess I'll go fuck myself.
>> Producer (01:01:59):
And then we do that as well.
>> Teacup (01:02:02):
In this situation, when she's telling. When she's telling you
no, well, then, yes, you are actually gonna go fuck yourself.
>> Producer (01:02:07):
Just respect the no. It's not that.
You don't need to approach us. That I think that's not normal.
No, I love how good of a man
you are. That is not normal.
>> Teacup (01:02:18):
Yeah, dude. And, uh, you know, and so that's why I was saying, you
know, I.
>> Chip (01:02:22):
Think that's why I'm struggling for this.
>> Teacup (01:02:24):
I was saying it a little bit earlier. Like,
we. I think you young folks,
young Mendez, you know, are gonna
end up having a problem with
understanding how to approach women.
There's some goofy shit. You guys do some goofy shit,
brother. Like that one particular person we were talking about. I've
never heard somebody call women bitch and ho so many
(01:02:46):
times and I'm like that actually I did
call that one Joe girlfriend.
>> Chip (01:02:50):
I actually did call the guy that I worked
without, uh, on it one time cuz I was like, cuz he was doing it so
much. And this was after he was talking about how he was hitting
her and you. Yeah, she
got surprised because that's one of my things where I'm like, if you talk
about that like he was.
>> Producer (01:03:06):
Talking about hitting his girlfriend, why didn't you call the
police?
>> Teacup (01:03:10):
You should beat his ass. But could they?
>> Chip (01:03:13):
That's fine because they broke. I would gotten away from
it and I had no evidence other than the fact that he was kind of
like.
>> Teacup (01:03:19):
Evidence was he was you telling you and I would
have put money on your books, dude.
>> Producer (01:03:24):
Well, here's the thing, via, uh, the Patreon.
>> Teacup (01:03:27):
If I do that though, Patreon is freaking amazing,
guys. If you guys don't know.
Patreon is amazing. It's doing all
kinds of wonders for these folks that are getting out and they're, and
they're able to engage with us
through their own eyes all the wonderful
experiences they're having and you get
to feel like you're in the moment. Patreon,
(01:03:49):
everybody. Patreon. Is that
good?
>> Producer (01:03:53):
That was perfect.
>> Chip (01:03:54):
That was beautiful.
She's telling us we got to be softer. I'll be softer.
Those impeccable, sir.
>> Teacup (01:04:03):
So I think, you know,
to what you were saying, um,
women want to be approached and I agree. That's
obvious. Women like men, men like women.
>> Producer (01:04:17):
Yes.
>> Teacup (01:04:17):
Some men like men. Someone like women. Some men
are figuring out. Some women figure out we got all different kinds of shit happening.
>> Producer (01:04:23):
Some likes everything.
>> Teacup (01:04:24):
Some like everything. I heard, that's too
fucking much. I don't know how you got the energy all that.
>> Producer (01:04:30):
I can't. Who. That's a lot to me.
>> Teacup (01:04:31):
God bless them people.
>> Producer (01:04:34):
They've got a capacity. I do not have,
uh, God,
they.
>> Teacup (01:04:40):
Don'T make enough Viagra and if they do,
I don't have enough heart,
you know. But
we're, um, we're gonna end up having a problem
where young men like yourself aren't gonna be able to
be able to talk to you guys. These
in person interactions happen less
(01:05:03):
frequently. Everybody. Door dashes.
They don't want to see the door dasher. I love talking to the doordash. Doordash.
Probably fucking hates me.
>> Chip (01:05:09):
I guarantee you they hate you.
>> Teacup (01:05:11):
I don't give a fuck.
>> Chip (01:05:12):
This dude. You better give him a good tip after
that.
>> Teacup (01:05:17):
I talked to the mailman.
>> Chip (01:05:19):
No, you don't.
>> Teacup (01:05:20):
I talked to fucking everybody.
>> Chip (01:05:21):
Why? That dude got that job. Because
he doesn't want to talk to people.
>> Teacup (01:05:25):
That's not true. Yes, it is.
>> Chip (01:05:28):
That that guy got that job because
he knew. Oh. All I got to do is just take the package up,
scan it, go back to my truck.
>> Teacup (01:05:35):
You know, it's funny. I don't talk to my neighbors, though.
>> Chip (01:05:39):
I don't either.
>> Producer (01:05:40):
Are these the neighbors that use the n word?
>> Teacup (01:05:42):
No, I don't live there. I thought that was when I was living in
Hawaii.
>> Chip (01:05:45):
That's m not true. We ran into your neighbors at the
bar.
>> Teacup (01:05:49):
They were like, oh, yeah, not those neighbors. Those neighbors are very nice
people. Very nice.
>> Chip (01:05:55):
You only talk to some.
>> Teacup (01:05:56):
I will talk to those neighbors. But here's the
thing. My kids were
or are around the same ages as their
kids, and they're super nice
people. You can't help but be nice and talk to them. I
can't help that there's some people that can win
me over back
to this thing real quick.
(01:06:20):
I think ultimately, when
something's fucked up and you recognize that something's fucked
up, if you're witnessing
it, like some gentlemen. Not gentlemen. Some piece of
shit being nasty, some elite. And then young ladies
do it, too, like, corrected. That's not necessary.
We don't have to do that. You know,
you don't have to. If your way of peacocking is just grabbing
(01:06:43):
a tit or, you know, you're not. You're not
peacocking, you're not winning.
>> Producer (01:06:47):
You're advocating calling each other out in the moment.
>> Teacup (01:06:50):
I say we do. I love it. I love it.
Embarrass the fuck out of them.
>> Chip (01:06:54):
I mean, it's probably the only way to do it.
>> Producer (01:06:56):
We would appreciate that.
>> Chip (01:06:57):
It's probably the only way to do it.
>> Teacup (01:06:59):
But I'm also, like, half the time,
he. He literally told you he doesn't know
anybody. Well, one person, he didn't
witness it happening. This person said it to him. He was haunting.
Never. I've never seen something like this
happen. I've never seen it. Although I think
now, and I'm saying this now, so if there's lady listeners,
(01:07:19):
and there should be, because I'm telling you about us, I'm telling you about
the. Dude, you should probably listen. Like,
dude, this is like inside information. Yeah, I should go for
this.
But if you. If.
God damn it. I lost track again. I was thinking
about how my wife came in and I lost track.
>> Chip (01:07:38):
Oh, you thought about your wife and you melted.
>> Producer (01:07:41):
Just thinks about her anymore.
>> Chip (01:07:42):
Oh, my God.
>> Teacup (01:07:43):
Yeah, I'm gonna tell. She's not. I gotta tell her. You don't
come back over here when we're doing.
We're doing the show. You go somewhere else.
>> Producer (01:07:53):
We should have her on the show. That would be fun just to
watch him melt down.
>> Chip (01:07:57):
Dude, he wouldn't function.
>> Teacup (01:07:58):
No, no, I would.
>> Producer (01:07:59):
You should have seen him at the photo shoot. I was at the photo shoot for the show.
He couldn't think. He couldn't look anywhere but where she was. It was
adorable.
>> Chip (01:08:05):
Aw.
>> Teacup (01:08:08):
Um. All right, let's.
All right.
>> Producer (01:08:14):
The great and mighty teacup can be spelled by
his wife.
>> Teacup (01:08:17):
But the point is, is say something in the
moment. But, I mean, it'd be dope if, like the
ladies, like I said to my daughter, you better get loud. Embarrass
the fuck out of that dude. Somebody's coming.
But then you also have to understand that dude, you look
at a lot of times now when you
see world star and all that other
bullshit, everybody has a phone out. You can
(01:08:40):
see 50 different angles of the same
fight. You never see somebody breaking it
up. You never. You know, that never
happens. I would like to see a
bunch of videos of, uh, some dude getting his shit pushed
in. If you want to do it literally. That could be fine,
too, for physically
sexually assaulting some woman. If you happen to see it,
(01:09:02):
push that fucker shit in.
Like. Like the guy from Stanford.
The rapist from Stanford.
>> Chip (01:09:11):
What.
>> Teacup (01:09:15):
What's his name?
>> Producer (01:09:17):
The, um, rapist from Sanford.
>> Teacup (01:09:18):
Yeah. Turner. Brock
Turner.
>> Producer (01:09:22):
Yeah, I remember him.
>> Teacup (01:09:23):
He got caught by two dudes
in the act. Caught by two
dudes.
Now, listen, fighting's not for everybody, you know,
but I just think that there are some things that you see
that move you.
>> Producer (01:09:41):
We would really appreciate it if you guys.
>> Teacup (01:09:44):
And I don't know. I don't know how you
could see something like that.
Because if you. If you look up Brock Turner and what the fuck
that fucker did if you happened
upon that. I don't know
how Brock Turner is
able to walk again. Use
(01:10:04):
his fingers. He got, uh. He shouldn't be allowed to use his fingers
no more.
>> Producer (01:10:07):
Ask me how long he got sentenced to jail.
>> Teacup (01:10:10):
Well, he. He shouldn't really get into a
lot of trouble for one night of fun. Is
somewhat
close to what the judge said.
>> Producer (01:10:22):
He was sentenced to six
months and served three
months and got out for good behavior.
>> Chip (01:10:30):
You're telling me the guy in our class
who ran from the cops, you know, got in that high
speed chase, he went to jail for what,
like six months? Yeah, he got
sentenced to nine months for that and got out in six
months. And this dude, I don't know fully what he did from what you're
describing.
>> Producer (01:10:48):
I mean, he was indicted for, on five
charges. Two for rape, two for felony sexual assault,
and one for attempted rape. And then later they dropped the two
rape charges. So he was indicted for three
charges, found guilty, pled not guilty, even
though two men witnessed it, two graduated.
>> Teacup (01:11:05):
I'm about to get graphic because, like, we
hear something we have to understand. When they said, like, uh, the rape charges
were dropped, let's understand why the rape charges were
dropped. And it was because he didn't use his
penis, instead used a
stick.
>> Chip (01:11:20):
Oh, cuz that's so much better.
>> Teacup (01:11:22):
That's ten times. That is worse. Those
guys should have,
uh, them guys probably aren't gay, but they should have taken turns
on him. They should have ran a train.
>> Producer (01:11:32):
Why was he not castrated? Why was.
>> Teacup (01:11:34):
You can't castrate somewhere.
>> Producer (01:11:36):
Why we can't castrate a rapist?
>> Teacup (01:11:38):
No, that's something they don't tend to be one timers.
I know some about cruel.
>> Chip (01:11:44):
That's cruel and unusual.
>> Producer (01:11:46):
Okay, so why don't we just put him in jail forever so he doesn't.
>> Chip (01:11:48):
I'm okay with that.
>> Producer (01:11:49):
But he did.
>> Teacup (01:11:50):
No, I'm not okay with that. I don't want to, I, uh, don't
want to pay for those
types of people's survival.
>> Producer (01:11:58):
This was the one where the judge was like, well, he's 19
and has his Life ahead of him. He said, uh, good looking
kid.
>> Teacup (01:12:04):
He said, I don't think that he
should be in trouble for one night of fun.
One night of fun is what he called it.
>> Chip (01:12:17):
Wonder what that judge did. Listen, that has him in
that mindset.
>> Producer (01:12:20):
No wonder you got recalled. Um, by the way,
at least there was a little bit of justice there where, um,
there was a bit of an outcry and he was recalled
by county voter, the judge, Judge Persky, was recalled by
county voters in June 2018.
>> Teacup (01:12:34):
So the, so the kid's name's Brock Turner, but
he changed his name. I don't know if you guys know that, but he changed his
name. He now goes by Alan Turner. I
think they shouldn't be allowed to do that. But
he shouldn't be allowed to do that.
>> Producer (01:12:47):
His name is Brock Allen Turner. So he just goes by his middle name.
>> Teacup (01:12:50):
Yeah.
>> Chip (01:12:51):
Oh, so you can still, like, if you looked up Alan Turner,
you'd still get back to.
>> Teacup (01:12:56):
Yeah, yeah. He's a scumbag,
but he's also a.
>> Producer (01:13:00):
Great example of why we don't come
forward and we don't go to the police and we don't go through the court system.
She literally had two witnesses. What's that
said that saw this stopped this man.
>> Teacup (01:13:12):
And, you know, it's hard. It's hard for, it's hard for good
dudes to go and do something.
And I go back to the dad that was defending his
daughter from a piece of shit
boyfriend, which is something that I tell my daughter, hey,
babe, you tell me if this fucker does something stupid,
you tell me, because I'll whoop the shit out of them.
(01:13:32):
And then, you know, and we say these things to each other,
right, m. And that's some locker room
talk. Oh, yeah, I'll beat the shit out of that guy. And then
when it comes time for ass weapons to get handed
out.
>> Producer (01:13:46):
Mhm.
>> Teacup (01:13:46):
Nick Fuentes has all his teeth.
Andrew Tate, still walking and breathing.
Although, you know,
I imagine being in an eastern european prison is
not going to be pleasant for him.
>> Chip (01:14:00):
So.
>> Teacup (01:14:00):
So, like, that's going to be righteous, I think.
>> Producer (01:14:04):
Yeah, but Donald Trump's still able to run for the presidency.
>> Teacup (01:14:06):
Yeah. Yeah.
>> Chip (01:14:08):
He's a felon. That's.
>> Teacup (01:14:11):
We can talk about that another day.
>> Producer (01:14:13):
We could say it 34 times. He's a felon. Felon, felon, felon.
>> Chip (01:14:16):
Yeah.
>> Teacup (01:14:19):
I think what it is then, is that,
you know, we're the
girl at, you know, the girl at the
mall. For me, being nervous,
you know, that's probably never gonna change. And I don't really think
it should. I think there's something, um,
like, inherent
(01:14:40):
about being afraid. Like it's good for
survival. So I don't think, I
think, I think you should always be conscious of your surroundings,
always. Um, and you should
always be cautious when dealing with
anybody, whether you know them or not.
And then for you and for
(01:15:01):
me and for all the other dudes
that actually give a fuck about these women
and, you know, not wanting to see them because
when they're sexually assaulted, raped, you know, or
whatever, that is a lifelong,
lifelong scar like that. Like,
(01:15:21):
I. You can't undo that.
You can't jump in the way back.
So if you see it, if you know it,
fucking do something.
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