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November 25, 2025 53 mins
This episode of The Morning Experience takes you on a ride through the wildest headlines and the realest conversations happening right now. We kick things off in Iowa City, where free public buses didn’t just boost ridership—they cleared traffic and cleaned the air.

Then we head to Oklahoma City, where a 7-Eleven clerk who defended herself from a violent attacker is now out of a job, raising major questions about worker safety and corporate responsibility. We also dive into the Coast Guard’s new policy reclassifying extremist imagery as hate symbols, and then shift into Topic Tuesday, asking the viral question: Should adults be allowed to whoop kids’ asses if threatened?

We unpack the Chicago stories of kids attacking adults—and the parents now facing consequences. In the second hour, we revisit the 7-Eleven case to talk about people who take their jobs a little too seriously, before the producer team jumps in for a hilarious round of Dating Disaster Stories. Trust us… you’ve had bad dates, but not like these.

A can’t-miss episode full of news, nuance, and necessary laughter.
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
The morning gud with Marquis getting in the mood.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
He's bringing that fire, got your energy lit from the
traffic to the coffee.

Speaker 3 (00:11):
He's the perfect fit, the saint of basics, that premium field.

Speaker 1 (00:15):
The Morning Experience. Yeah, we keep it every day.

Speaker 4 (00:23):
Happy Tuesday to you. Welcome to the Morning Experience. I
am Marque Slopton. That is she'sy, get busy, and that
is doctor Mik Campbell.

Speaker 5 (00:31):
Jeez, what's going on? Good brother? How you feeling?

Speaker 6 (00:33):
Happy Tuesday.

Speaker 7 (00:34):
We made it past that dreadful, dreadful Monday, y'all. So
if you made it, if you made it this far,
your week is gonna start looking up from here.

Speaker 6 (00:41):
Happy Tuesday.

Speaker 5 (00:43):
Yes, yes, indeed, one more day closer to Thanksgiving.

Speaker 8 (00:46):
Doctor Kak, Yeah, I can't wait, Like I am look
so looking forward to Turkey.

Speaker 9 (00:50):
I'm so looking forward to.

Speaker 8 (00:52):
Just like not just vegging out a little bit, literally
just eating a bunch and doing absolutely nothing.

Speaker 4 (01:00):
Yeah, I'm looking forward to doing absolutely nothing as well.
Our first story from Microwave News comes from New York Times.

Speaker 5 (01:10):
Yeah you heard that right. It comes from the New
York Times.

Speaker 4 (01:12):
And Iowa City made its buses free, traffic cleared, and
so did the air ridership jump. People cut back on driving,
and over the summer the city extended this program where they.

Speaker 5 (01:25):
Made buses free. Shiz.

Speaker 4 (01:28):
Can you imagine if Septa said everything's free.

Speaker 7 (01:33):
It's kind of free now with the teams, they just
hop on there. I'd be like, damn, pulled out, my
pulled out and went and got a bus pass and
everything for the day and need they just hop right
on there.

Speaker 6 (01:41):
But I know it sounds crazy.

Speaker 7 (01:45):
When you make things free and affordable to people, they
start using it more often and it becomes something in
the community. Maybe we should try this everything we see
They tried it with daycare and more people were signing
up for daycare. And now the buses are free, you know,
which means that they could have been.

Speaker 6 (01:59):
Doing when it's a long time ago.

Speaker 9 (02:01):
But I digress exactly exactly.

Speaker 4 (02:05):
Opposers may call this idea radical, doctor cat.

Speaker 9 (02:08):
Oh yeah, I think it's the.

Speaker 8 (02:11):
Most ridiculous idea that a free bus is somehow a
radical idea when you have people who are already paying
taxes to have these these socialist programs like buses already
in the city. This is what Mam Donnie in New
York City ran on you Curtis talking about Mam Donnie
on the show before this, and people lambasted him talking

(02:32):
about well, just socials and you're gonna the buses shouldn't
be free.

Speaker 9 (02:36):
People will have to pay.

Speaker 8 (02:37):
People pay high taxes, high sales tax, high income tax
in these bigger cities, and that should go towards this
kind of this kind of service for the entire community.

Speaker 4 (02:52):
Yeah, our produced eyelist. She says, I'm free. But where
does the funding come from? The paid drivers, gas supply,
bus maintenance and who's impacted? All important questions. Our next
story comes from Atlanta. Black Star and twenty five year
old Stephanie Dillard was working the night shift out of
Oklahoma City seven eleven when her worst fears came through.

(03:14):
A customer viciously assaulted the convenience store clerk after she
refused his counterfeit one hundred dollars bill. Feeling fearing for
her life, she shot the suspect and the stomach with
the gun and she kept behind that she kept finding
the counter for self defense. The attacker fled and was
later arrested at the hospital. He faces multiple serious charges. However,
she is out of a job.

Speaker 7 (03:35):
Shiz, do you eight, skatee go home, so your eight
get the hell out of there. But no, she was
attacked for refusing his money and then she defended herself. Man,
these jobs are wild, so they just they wanted her
to just something to happen to her so then they

(03:56):
can try to get some type of sales and everything
off of her pain and everything like that. This is wild,
but again, this is America.

Speaker 9 (04:06):
Yeah, what's crazy about this?

Speaker 8 (04:08):
Yeah, what's crazy about this is being out of a
job for defending yourself in this economy is probably one
of the wildest stories, right, Like, she was probably in
that store by herself, probably targeted because she was in
that store by herself right as a woman, and thought
that he could get over on her. And meanwhile, you

(04:29):
save a whole store and they fire you. I would
sue them for all the money. I absolutely would. That
has to be It's got to be one of those.
Is there a category, a protecting category for I was
at work and I shot my attacker and I got fired.

Speaker 9 (04:43):
There's got to be one for that.

Speaker 4 (04:46):
Yeah, absolutely, especially if there's folks like George Zimmerman walking
around one Our final story comes from my CBS News
and Coast Guard will reclassify there an imagery as hate symbols.
After a controversial proposal, the US Coast Guard said that
they would reclassify imagery like swastika's and newses as hate symbols.

(05:11):
So now that they're facing the backlash, they're stepping back.
Here this this this is just wow, wow, wow, wow,
work here, uh, doctor King, Because I'm just like, you
know what, y'all were so tough to say with your chest,
you know, keep that same energy, so to speak.

Speaker 9 (05:28):
Heap that same energy.

Speaker 8 (05:30):
But they what was interesting about this was the bi
partisan pushback they got, right, this is this is one
of the times I'm always asking, you know, when we're
going to get a good work in government, And this
is one of the times that that our government came
together in a byperson waited and people across the country,
not just our government, to say, what do you mean
that newses and swasakas aren't hate symbols? And the other

(05:53):
interesting thing about this is when you talk to some
of the folks who were kind of like higher ups,
when you look at some of their stuff from the
Coast Guard, they had no idea this was even going on.
So it was truly a decision made by someone who
seemed to be trying to take advantage of the moment
of this relaxing of what we know to understand and

(06:13):
be racism, and it got rightfully got all of the
pushback it should have gotten.

Speaker 5 (06:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (06:21):
Absolutely, So we're at the point where we said that
these things weren't a problem, and now we're reclassifying them
again as a problem. So you know, the problem that
comes in there is that some stuff that they reclassify
isn't going to make it back into that list. So
some of the things that we looked at as as
an issue, they're not going to make it back onto

(06:42):
that list. They'll say the swastika and all the other stuff.
But again, we had Eli Musk Elon Musk doing the
old the whole Hale Hitler and this is the old
greeting from Bruh. We know what it is, but it's
America and we are here at this point.

Speaker 4 (07:00):
Our producer Ala said, how can they reclaim that as
a hate symbol when the president is trying his damness
to remove black history from American education and we in
the last eight years just build a museum on African
American culture in America.

Speaker 5 (07:16):
Again, good good, good comment, folks.

Speaker 4 (07:20):
We got some good, good, good content coming up after this.

Speaker 5 (07:24):
It's stopping Tuesday.

Speaker 4 (07:25):
This is the Morning Experienced folks, and it's topic Tuesday.
And you know I brought up the question should we
with these kids at real real quick?

Speaker 6 (07:37):
Yes? All right?

Speaker 5 (07:38):
So why did I bring this up?

Speaker 4 (07:39):
Because what happened in Chicago. So this story comes from
Atlanta Black Star and Chicago mom says that she will
pursue charges against the parents of kids who brutally attacked
her and her nine year old son. The Chicago mother
who was really attacked by large Rubertildren shared that she

(08:00):
plans to press charges against the errands to the kids
who assaulted her and her son. She said that I
felt helpless because I was down on the ground and
he was down on the ground and he was looking
at me, streaming, Mommy, please help me, Please help me,
And she said, I couldn't get at myself. I could
do nothing. So this has brought brought some conversation and

(08:22):
kind of discourse to the social media, a realm where
some people are like I will box a kid, I
will box a kid, and then you have other.

Speaker 5 (08:33):
People that are like, these are kids, these are kids. Shit.
I'll begin with you, where do you land on this?

Speaker 7 (08:40):
You know, as a father of five all who were
under eighteen, whooped?

Speaker 6 (08:45):
They asked? Just whooped they again?

Speaker 7 (08:52):
And if you miss anything on the show, go back
and check us out on Spotify, Apple podcasts in Heart Radio.
We've talked about this before where there's no such thing
as community anymore. If we still had community as parents,
then this would be avoided. It used to be a
time where you would do stuff or you wouldn't do
stuff because you know, miss Saying up the street is
gonna see you, she gonna whoop you g ass before

(09:12):
you get home, and she's gonna call your mom before
she sends you back down there, so you can get
in trouble at home too. Now it's like, hey, you
touch my kid, or don't you say nothing to my kid.

Speaker 6 (09:22):
Your kid could be in.

Speaker 7 (09:23):
The complete wrong and people are like, don't talk to
my kid, that's a child.

Speaker 6 (09:26):
You talk to me.

Speaker 7 (09:27):
Well, if you was around while your kid was doing
this stuff, I wouldn't be talking to your kid, and
your kid probably wouldn't be doing.

Speaker 6 (09:32):
Some of this stuff.

Speaker 7 (09:33):
So I absolutely believe in I just think we need
community back. And if I'm not sure if everybody saw
the apology that one of the parents gave where the
mom started off the girl was laughing. She was like
kind of kind of chuckling a little bit, and the
mom was like, now, keep in mind, she's a child,
so keep it, keep it classy or whatever like that.

(09:55):
Your child didn't keep it classy when she was attacking
this prone woman who's pregnant. So we got to stop
acting like when when when stuff goes down, it's like, oh,
they're just kids, Like nah, these ain't just kids.

Speaker 6 (10:05):
These are mutants or something.

Speaker 7 (10:07):
Like that, because we've got something going on where they're
they don't they're lawless at this point, and it's it's
it's just it's just the thing now, and we just
kind of brush it off as their kids and whatever.

Speaker 6 (10:17):
But kids take advantage of this.

Speaker 7 (10:19):
Kids take advantage of well, I know that if I
get locked up, I'm not going to do adult time.
I might go to Julie for a little bit, or
I might get this, get that. But they don't really
fear any consequences anymore because there aren't really any consequences
for them. The mom is going to sue when she's
going through the parents that ain't got nothing to do
with the kids because parents probably even gonna be able
to pay that, so it'll just be an open lawsuit
against them.

Speaker 8 (10:40):
Yeah, doctor k Yeah, I think you know, I feel
I feel really bad for the family, and I really
the mother and son because this this is what we
call in from where I'm from, a bad abandons. Why
are these kids running around attacking their their their peers

(11:01):
at this child had been bullied in school and the
mother had complained about the bullying, and for some reason,
the school was not able.

Speaker 9 (11:09):
To handle the bullying right.

Speaker 8 (11:11):
They weren't able to put a plan in place, work
with the families, all the things that you have to
do to nit bullying in the butt in the bud.
And I think that I also feel real bad for
Mayor Johnson, poor Brandon, Poor Mayor Brandon, because he got
to deal with Ice, he got to deal with all
these different things happening, the shootings, and this is another

(11:31):
high profile case that he has to deal with that
is coming out of the city of Chicago, and it's
just it's just very unfortunate.

Speaker 9 (11:38):
It's very unfortunate.

Speaker 5 (11:40):
Yeah, And the video was hard to watch. I mean,
like I let out a little audible sound.

Speaker 4 (11:50):
When watching the video, especially when she got knocked to
the ground, I saw.

Speaker 6 (11:55):
That she was pat it.

Speaker 4 (11:56):
And when I saw her go to the ground and
then them, you know, attack her more, I was like,
oh man, this is this is this is tough, and like,
even to myself, I'm like, you know, if if if
I'm seeing a situation like this outside and I'm seeing

(12:19):
these these group of kids on top of these pregnant women,
like yeah, somebody's somebody miss.

Speaker 7 (12:30):
My uncle, They're gonna be having them little kids graduation
caps sitting on the empty chair, Like if you're still here,
he would have been graduating today.

Speaker 4 (12:49):
We are talking about this this issue that is happening
and unfolding in Chicago, where these group of kids attacked
a son and his pregnant mother. So the same group
of children accused of attacking a Chicago mother and her
young son outside of school is also allegedly responsible for

(13:11):
another attack.

Speaker 5 (13:12):
This time was a man with autism.

Speaker 4 (13:17):
So a family that lives in the same neighborhood where
the attack against for Shonda Hatter and her nine year
old son happened was also targeted by the same band
of kids. Carolyn Sanford says her twenty one year old
son suffers from autism and has been the target of
constant bullying and harassment for months by the children. Scene
in the now viral video attacking Hatter he sat on

(13:40):
Brown happened over the summer near a set of Chicago
housing projects in the South Daring neighborhood. And this is
bringing to the conversation like, you know, what if one
of these kids' heads would have been boxed off in
the summertime, this probably would not have happened to Courshanda.

(14:00):
Now that's me generalizing here, okay, but but I just
feel like because there there.

Speaker 5 (14:08):
Wasn't any any any consequence in the.

Speaker 4 (14:13):
Forefront, absolutely, it leads to more nonsense in the back end,
so to speak.

Speaker 8 (14:20):
And also it sounds like these kids were a little organized. No,
they go around beating people up for fun and or
from what just just because to be bullies. What if
this is a known problem. We're going back to the schools,
and we're going back to the home, the households. Why
aren't isn't the community which includes the schools, which includes

(14:41):
the parents, which includes wherever these kids are hanging out,
wherever they're congregating, Because they are obviously organized. Why isn't
Why haven't they put in the kaibash on this? And
a lot of folks will say, well, they don't really,
they can't really track these kids, right, Oh, we don't
know what they're doing it, we don't know where they're hiding.

Speaker 9 (14:56):
Well, that's the point.

Speaker 8 (14:58):
You need to make sure to smoke them out of
the the places where they are able to organize and
literally harass their peers and serious and people in the
community are autistic people. Uh, this is really not just
bad behavior, but it is organized bad behavior, and that's
very dangerous.

Speaker 5 (15:16):
Organize bad behavior, shitz.

Speaker 4 (15:20):
We talked about that recently with my situation because my
car was stolen and your car almost got stolen.

Speaker 7 (15:31):
Organized group of kids, organized, and and and the fact
that the generation now, and I hate to sound like
the old person, like this generation, but they do everything
where there you can visibly see them, they're on camera,
they have a bunch of witnesses around whenever they do everything.

Speaker 6 (15:49):
They do, and nobody does anything.

Speaker 7 (15:53):
It's like it's it's not even like people are like, well,
these are kids, so we're not going to treat them
like kids.

Speaker 6 (15:58):
It's almost if people are scared to.

Speaker 7 (16:00):
Discipline these kids now, because it's like if the parents
aren't doing it, and again, stuff happens. You know, you
get you get teens who are just kind of out
of control, no matter what kind of household they come from.
So you can't put everything on the parents, but you
do put that on the community that they live in,
because everybody has to step up and say something about
what's going on. And and for this is just always

(16:21):
be happening, and for for for the woman to say
her twenty one year old son has been getting harassed
and attacked by these same kids and these are the
same when the mom came on and did the apology
for a kid talking about these are just children. No,
these these are adult type crimes, and you're allowing your
child to do it. And you're the reason why your

(16:42):
child is doing this because you coddle them. Whenever they
get in trouble, whenever the discipline starts to come down
on them, it's, oh, well, they're just kids.

Speaker 6 (16:50):
It don't work like that in life.

Speaker 7 (16:51):
And we got to understand that we gotta we gotta
treat these kids like our parents taught us. And it's
just like you were not you are not going to
just get away with everything. A kid I'm I'm black,
I'm a female, or anything like that. Your excuses don't
mean nothing in the real world. And we got to
stop letting them believe that because they get older and
believe that stuff and end up dat in jail.

Speaker 4 (17:12):
Producer Ila she says, we've all seen video or a
dozen videos every week of a student child assaulting adult teachers.
What I'm willing to end We even solid in in
in Harrisburg as well, and then she she continues on
to say that there's an adult somewhere in the background
benefiting from the violent and organized behavior. At least one

(17:34):
adult influence or instructed those children to act, and all
be held accountable with consequences. She ends, Folks, we are
having this interesting conversation about the parents speaking speaking out.

Speaker 5 (17:51):
Well, parents now speaking out about the kids.

Speaker 4 (17:55):
Some some parents, some community members went to the school
and and we're like rocking on the gates and everything,
telling them kids, come outside, come outside, come outside.

Speaker 5 (18:07):
And that caused some discourse as well.

Speaker 4 (18:11):
You know, some people saying, oh, they shouldn't have done that,
other people saying, oh, they should have done that. I'm
with the folks that I'm glad they did that, because
them kids need to be scared. They need to be scared,
you know, to feel that kind of fear that they're
impeding on other people.

Speaker 5 (18:31):
Yes, yes, reciprocate.

Speaker 4 (18:32):
That may seem a little mean, because yes, they're still
kids and they're developing in their minds are still developing
and everything.

Speaker 5 (18:40):
But like being a terror a hey, perfect work. Clap
it back, doctor k clap it back.

Speaker 8 (18:49):
Oh yeah, I not only do I agree with agree
with the clappit back. I think that when you have
a clear disconnect with the community, that mom getting on
there and trying to downplay what the daughter did, but
also kind of get being a little you know, facetious
with it shows a clear disconnect from the community and
are just not a care. So if you if you

(19:10):
do not care, we have to show you that we
care about our community.

Speaker 9 (19:13):
And you can't do that here.

Speaker 8 (19:15):
And I think if it means tell them kids that
come outside and you know, show them a little something.

Speaker 9 (19:19):
You know, I'm not saying, you know, do anything.

Speaker 8 (19:22):
You know, scare a little bit, but you do not
don't do them great, don't do too much, you know,
to keep it, keep.

Speaker 9 (19:26):
It, keep it a little scary. But it is.

Speaker 8 (19:29):
It is truly a lack of community care that is
on display. They don't care about the community, they don't
feel connected.

Speaker 9 (19:36):
And that's what has to change. And how do you
change that.

Speaker 8 (19:39):
The schools, the parents, the after school programs, the community programs,
dog on restaurants and all these things have to come
together to figure out that. I know, the mayor's office
is at its wits end. I know these you know,
everybody trying to work in their silos or at their
wits end. It takes a concerted and a coordinated community

(19:59):
effort to fix that problem of people not feeling attached
to their communities and feel like their communities are worth
something and they are worth something in their communities.

Speaker 9 (20:07):
That has to change.

Speaker 4 (20:09):
And Chiz, I hope that it doesn't just stop here,
Like I hope that the folks just didn't come just
to rattle offenses and then go home. But like this,
this really starts like some intentional community work.

Speaker 5 (20:22):
That village that you were talking about.

Speaker 7 (20:25):
Not necessarily even just the community. Our problem with with
everybody now is that we just have no sense of family.
So it's not even just the community that you want
to stick up for your kids or look out for
your kids. We don't even have family. We don't do
the cousins sleepovers no more. We don't do none of
that stuff no more. So it used to be a
time if something like this happened, what you do, Go

(20:46):
get all your cousins and then everybody will meet up
at the school and then we'll handle it from there.
I'll get my little sister or whatever. Now it's nobody
hangs out with nobody. So now it's just kind of
people are just kind of making rules up on the fly.
And then when those consequences hit and everybody realizes that,
oh this isn't just a a YouTube viral moment, or

(21:06):
this isn't something like that, this has real consequences, that
stuff will start to stop. But we have to we
have to really re established family and community in everywhere.
Just because we give up so fast on people, we
separate ourselves from everybody else because it doesn't directly affect us,
but in all actuality, it does because it sets a
blueprint for the rest of it. Gets the follow up,

(21:28):
they see nothing will happen, or it's a quick slap
on the wrist, and you'll see more of this happening
down the line.

Speaker 5 (21:33):
Before we get started here our producer Ila.

Speaker 4 (21:35):
She said on Lynch Mobby should have had police arrest
them in the middle of their classes or snatch them
out of their homes and all. I'm I'm with the
idea of the scared straight, you know, uh, scare scare,
scare them straight. If it will actually work, you know,
reciprocate that terror, you know that that that gut feeling

(21:59):
of how listeners that that they feel, you know, would
like to see it more come from the community folks,
folks that look like them, so that they can show
that love as well.

Speaker 5 (22:13):
But but I.

Speaker 4 (22:14):
Don't know, they may be beyond love shiitz and like,
I don't want to say that, but I think America
needs to have this tough conversation.

Speaker 5 (22:26):
No, some kids are just lost causes.

Speaker 6 (22:33):
Yeah, it's just like that.

Speaker 7 (22:34):
He looking for he looking for an ally right here,
he trying to him. Like, bro, I'm sitting over here
on the side, just chilling. You ain't gonna throw.

Speaker 4 (22:45):
But like, yo, that's how I feel though, like like yo,
like like yo, some some kids, some kids, it's.

Speaker 5 (22:50):
Just like yo, you're a lost cause like you you.

Speaker 7 (22:55):
Are you Depending on who the parents are. I would
have to agree with you again. I keep going back
to that apology video that we saw. There were a
couple of them, but one where the where the mom
was just sitting there with her daughter and she put
the care on her daughter and her daughter was like
smirking and then she started crying. But you can tell,
like we've been around here for a while, you could
tell she was crying because she was kind of salty

(23:17):
that she had the camera right in front of her
face and everything like that to make an apology. But
it's like, we can toughen up and everything like that,
and we can as a community can come together and
say we're gonna.

Speaker 6 (23:27):
Not let allow this.

Speaker 7 (23:29):
But when the parents are pretty much allowing this and saying,
you know, just let it, let it go their kids,
it's just like we are giving these kids excuses to
be lawless and that's not gonna turn out.

Speaker 6 (23:40):
Well.

Speaker 7 (23:42):
It's a reason why the streets don't have a code anymore.
And it sounds crazy because the streets having a cold,
but it's a reason why. And that's because most of
the kids in the street, they look up to their
og who is twenty one.

Speaker 6 (23:53):
So he don't need no life experience.

Speaker 7 (23:56):
But that's their og out there, because that's the only
one around it that they look up to. So we
got to do a whole breakdown and rebuild back up.

Speaker 4 (24:03):
Slowly and doctor key with that video, you know, that's
the video that they chose, like they could have. You know,
I'm pretty sure they re recorded like they chose like
that that's the one.

Speaker 5 (24:17):
And that can be problematic because it's just.

Speaker 4 (24:21):
Like, Mom, maybe you don't understand the gravity of the
seriousness of this situation, and that maybe what we see
being perpetuated by her daughter.

Speaker 8 (24:33):
Again, your ogs are you know, you know, nineteen and
a half, twenty, you know, by the they're thirty four,
by the time they're thirty four, their Grandmom's crazy times
that we're living in. But I think also, you know,
I'm going to go back to this idea of community,
like they're posting these videos because that is the new community.

(24:54):
They're looking to people online to validate their experiences. So
that is where they're turning. They're not getting it if
they're not getting it in their community, they're gonna seek
that validation in that formation and that camaraderie somewhere, right,
And the ogs are also the other problem with the
ogs are. Some of this bad behavior is modeled from them.

(25:14):
I'll tell you a story here in our local schools,
very short story that a lot of the kids are
carrying on generational beef right that their parents started, right
Hispanics and blacks. And you know, they don't even know
why they're mad at such and such.

Speaker 9 (25:29):
They know they're in their house.

Speaker 8 (25:30):
They don't like Hispanic people, and they know in their
house they've been beefing with the black folks since nineteen
eighty nine. There's not an example of what it looks
like to be whole in community. There's not an example
of what it looks like to be a positive contributing
member of your society that whatever configuration society takes. But

(25:53):
we are on tiktop, and we are monetized, you know
what I'm saying. And that's a viral hit right there,
I have I've ever seen one.

Speaker 4 (25:59):
Just revisiting uh this uh seven eleven worker story.

Speaker 5 (26:03):
I mean this, This young.

Speaker 4 (26:04):
Lady put her her life on the line for for
her company, didn't have to uh shot shot somebody in
self defense and and she still ended up losing her job.
Which that's even wild that that was even on the
menu of things that that could happen. So it's it's

(26:27):
just wild to me. But but it really really really
brings me to you know, some folks that like.

Speaker 5 (26:33):
Take their jobs a little.

Speaker 4 (26:35):
Too seriously and don't need to take it that serious,
you know. And and the first thing that comes to
mind are are and I'm not targeting anyone. I'm not
talking about the the autistic ones that do it, because
Walmart they're doing a good service with that, but just

(26:56):
the people that want to check your check your receipts
at Walmart, like you don't got to do that, like
go somewhere and and and they're they're they're they're so intent,
they're so intent, look at receipt, look at the bag
of the receipt in the bag, like you know what, sir,
I did this at I stopped at a respect for

(27:16):
you because I could have just told you that STFU.

Speaker 5 (27:19):
And walk out.

Speaker 4 (27:20):
I can walk out of here with a big screen
TV and you technically can't do anything.

Speaker 6 (27:26):
What's the use is no that that that's exactly it.

Speaker 7 (27:30):
I'm here in Philly, so you know, they're they're they're
super strict on the check the receipt thing.

Speaker 6 (27:36):
And it's like, bruh, I do not need to stop
at you.

Speaker 7 (27:39):
Especially when I'm walking out the door that you're standing
in front of at the self checkout. I'm on camera
at self checkout and standing in front of you checking
stuff out.

Speaker 6 (27:47):
What are you touching my stuff? For a big dog?

Speaker 7 (27:49):
But listen, I hate I hate the person that's in
the office setting who wants to be the supervisor.

Speaker 6 (27:55):
But it's just the regular employee just like you. They
feel like they're the supervisor.

Speaker 7 (27:59):
That is the one that fishes me off more than
anything in this world, because it's like, bruh, you were
you were making actually less than me.

Speaker 6 (28:06):
You were not a boss in here. Just just go ahead,
do your eight and skape big dog.

Speaker 8 (28:11):
Yeah doctor k yeah, yes already I already have you,
already have you. I'm not gonna hold you as TSA workers.
Why are you mad at me? I just got here.
I understand the six hundred people behind me didn't take.

Speaker 9 (28:25):
Their shoes off.

Speaker 8 (28:26):
Mine are already off. Things are already out of my pocket.
Why are you yelling? Do you understand I'm saying? And no,
my laptop is there is no laptop in the bag.
Don't look at me crazy. I just got to the airport.
This is my first flight today, it might be your
ninety ninth. Please please watch yourself because we're gonna get
in a fight and I'm gonna go jail and then
I'm gonna sue you.

Speaker 9 (28:44):
I understand.

Speaker 4 (28:48):
I think that uh, security guards at at banks, I oh,
your lord, I I I'm like, bro, if it really
went down, if it really went down, Like I don't
think I've ever seen like a fit security guard.

Speaker 5 (29:07):
At a bank at all.

Speaker 4 (29:09):
And I'm like, if it ever went down, you might
as well just get on the ground with everybody else.

Speaker 5 (29:15):
Because you're not you're not securing anything.

Speaker 4 (29:19):
And like they they are, they are so so so serious,
you know, checking out cars, looking at you in the bank,
and it's just like, if it really went down, I
don't think there's anything that you can do.

Speaker 9 (29:35):
They can do.

Speaker 8 (29:35):
Let's take the cash out of their own pockets and
give it over that mice solve the situation. But that's
all you're good for, you know. I'm saying there's nothing
you can do in that situation. Good sir, good tubby, sir,
good round sir.

Speaker 4 (29:46):
Yes, yes, yeah, Producer I says, so many people are
so extra at their jobs authority of any kind can
really make an employee in that role a straight up gestapo,
not just the customer, but the co workers as well.

Speaker 5 (30:03):
That is that is true. That is true.

Speaker 4 (30:06):
This is the Morning Experience, folks, thank you for joining us.
So instead of continuing the topic Tuesday conversation, we wanted
to introduce one of the newest members of the team.
The Morning Experience is always growing. We are soon going
to be having interns. You heard that right, America soon
going to be having interns, so so stay with us

(30:30):
about that. But again talking about our expanding team, our
producer Ila. We have read comments from Isla from the past,
so we wanted to bring Isla to the forefront so
that you all can hear her voice and to get
a better acquainted with her. So we said, what better
way than to get acquainted with America then to talk

(30:50):
about a dating disaster story because we all have had
those dating disaster stories, so why not have Ala tell
us about one of her dating disaster story. So, Producer Island,
if you can tell us about a dating disaster story
that that you have had experienced.

Speaker 6 (31:10):
Uh yeah, you had a floor?

Speaker 5 (31:12):
Floor is yours? Well?

Speaker 10 (31:15):
Thanks for having me on again. Uh, dating disaster. I
don't even know where to begin. It sounds a sad,
but I want to talk about my very first blind date.

Speaker 11 (31:25):
Dating disaster.

Speaker 9 (31:26):
All right.

Speaker 10 (31:27):
So, and she's you may know a little something about it.
I don't know, keish you might know. I don't want
to show my age or anything. But you know, you
used to meet people on like phone chat lines, the
Philly do Arty line.

Speaker 11 (31:43):
You have a special request from, and it'd be some
crazy name or whatever. But there was this guy.

Speaker 10 (31:48):
I was young, let's say I was I actually just
turned eighteen, and I was living in Springfield, Delca. Poop poop,
and I literally we and this guy had talked for
like two three month and every time I kept saying like, Hey,
let's go get lunch, let's go get a cheese steak,
let's go meet up.

Speaker 11 (32:06):
I'll meet you, let's hit the.

Speaker 10 (32:07):
Trolley together, let's go to the park, let's go to
a movie. It was always like a, oh, I don't know,
I'm not sure. So one day I just gave him
an ultimatum. I was like, listen, I'll move on to
the next Philly Donut answer if you do not commit.

Speaker 11 (32:23):
And so he's like, all right, bet, we'll meet me
here at this street.

Speaker 10 (32:26):
And it was in Southwest Philly. Meet me at this
street and I'll meet you and then we can go
and we'll catch the l we'll catch a shuttle or
something and we'll go to one of the restaurants downtown
or we'll go to like at the time, I mean,
South Street was always popping.

Speaker 11 (32:40):
It's always popping, right, So we were like, all right,
we'll hit up South Street.

Speaker 10 (32:45):
So he tells me to meet me at this store
on a corner store in Southwest Philly. And the next
thing I know, I I now call me bad. We
didn't even have a date, all right, So I see
pictures of him, because you know, he text me pictures.
I text him pictures and I'm dressed specifically at a

(33:07):
baby blue turtleneck sweater and at the time, Eve was rocking,
so I had the short blonde Eve haircut all grown
out because I was crazy. But anyway, so he sends
me the picture and I'm like, all right, I know
who I'm looking for. He told me what he was
gonna wear, and I roll up, you know, and I
actually had my friend drive me, right, So she drove

(33:30):
me because you know, it's just a rule.

Speaker 11 (33:32):
You don't go alone.

Speaker 10 (33:34):
And so the next thing I know, I go and
I see this guy standing in the corner and I'm like, yo,
I don't know if that's him. I'm gonna do a
drive by. So we drive by and I'm like, yo,
that's him. I'm like, hm, I gotta get closer.

Speaker 11 (33:49):
Let's let's see. Let me give you closer. Get out
the car now.

Speaker 10 (33:53):
I told him I was gonna be wearing a gray turtleneck, right,
this was just my little fail safe.

Speaker 11 (33:58):
But I had a baby blue turtleneck on.

Speaker 10 (34:00):
And anybody who knows me knows I am prominent, all right,
just a big oreo and I'm prominent.

Speaker 9 (34:05):
Okay.

Speaker 11 (34:06):
I see him, he sees me. We lock eyes. The
next thing I know, he smiles.

Speaker 10 (34:12):
I lost it. Not a single gripper in sight. He
did not have any teeth. Oh past him. I walked
past him and I said, I text my friend and
said meete me round the block.

Speaker 11 (34:25):
Hop right in the car. He is blowing up my phone.

Speaker 1 (34:29):
Where are you at?

Speaker 11 (34:30):
Was that you? Oh my god, why did you leave me?
Blah blah blah blah blah.

Speaker 10 (34:34):
And then after that I proceeded to like you know,
I just blocked his number and I didn't go on
the filly.

Speaker 11 (34:39):
Donut again another day in my life after that.

Speaker 10 (34:42):
But he then proceeded to like literally text me from
other phones and threaten to throw hot grease on me
and all kinds of stuff. And this is why I
don't do I don't do any kind of social media dating.

Speaker 11 (34:54):
I don't do any of that.

Speaker 10 (34:55):
Like if I don't vibe with you, I just don't
vibe with you because he ain't have no grippers and
maybe that makes me shallow, but he have no grippers,
And it was like his entire outfit was from eighty
two Dusty and just just extra dusty. He wasn't groomed.
It looked like he took a picture ten years before

(35:18):
and just shared it to me. So I guess I
got hat fish because he was definitely wearing a hat.
So if he didn't have grippers, he might not have
had hair either.

Speaker 6 (35:24):
I don't know if.

Speaker 9 (35:25):
Teeth is such a loser situation, my god.

Speaker 11 (35:28):
I mean, yeah, don't get me wrong. I mean, don't
get me wrong.

Speaker 10 (35:31):
A person I could roll up to somebody who tells
me that they're in a wheelchair and if I decide
to pursue that because of you know, giving the opportunity
or the connection that we had, then that's on me,
you know.

Speaker 11 (35:43):
But if you're just declining to tell me things.

Speaker 10 (35:46):
I should be prepared for, you know, that's just a bit,
you know, like if I if I sent them a
picture of Gabrielle Union and I show up, I'm sure
they're everybody like what the hell? You know, So after
a while it was just yeah, that was a you
have a date and just dipped off.

Speaker 4 (36:03):
Well, well, hey, hey look it. If you're going to
go on a date, you know, bring your personality, but
also bring your.

Speaker 6 (36:08):
Teeth as meet me at the dentist's office.

Speaker 5 (36:13):
That was producer Isla. You will hear her more and
more on on.

Speaker 4 (36:20):
Our Friday shows as we roll out our Melanin Report Fridays.
The show is growing and I just love it. Producer
Isla brought up this interesting thing about the Philadelphia party line.
Now she is my cousins talked about it all the time.

Speaker 5 (36:39):
What what what exactly was.

Speaker 7 (36:41):
It the party line? Basically, if you just you just
want to kind of sum it up, it was catfish
before there was the party time. The party line was
a time though it was like you didn't know what
you was getting, and it was like it was like
sticking your hand into a box and turning your head

(37:02):
and then you're just like, all right, whatever, I grab out,
I'm gonna see where this goes. You know, everybody has
a beautiful everybody has a beautiful voice over.

Speaker 6 (37:09):
The phone.

Speaker 7 (37:14):
Once you get in person, and some some things, uh
normally go completely left.

Speaker 6 (37:19):
But the party line was a time.

Speaker 7 (37:22):
It was It was a time you met a lot
of different people in there, a lot of characters on there.
That was that was That was a good experiment in
time right there.

Speaker 4 (37:32):
Spends were you on there catfishing people too?

Speaker 6 (37:36):
No?

Speaker 7 (37:36):
I got catfished on the party line?

Speaker 9 (37:41):
Get it?

Speaker 6 (37:43):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (37:43):
Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 7 (37:44):
Let me tell you how thoughty, this was so I
met a quick story. I met somebody on the party line.
We were talking and then you know, the party line,
you know, you get real numbers out and like, hey,
call me on my real and that's when you had
house phones and everything. So I'm talking to my mom's phone,
met somebody else in the party line. Stop walking to
the first person, went out to meet the second person.
Worst mistake of my life, worst mistake of my life.

(38:08):
First off, the girl said her name was Alicia, and
she said her last name was Rodriguez, but couldn't pronounce it, so.

Speaker 6 (38:15):
Show what it was going to be.

Speaker 7 (38:20):
And me, being dumb and a horny teenager, I'm like, man,
I'm gonna go anyway. And I went, I went, I'll
never forget off.

Speaker 6 (38:28):
I got Philly people. I got off at broad in
Wyoming and.

Speaker 7 (38:34):
I and I met up with this girl and I'm
she's standing right next to me and I'm looking around, like, man,
where's she at.

Speaker 6 (38:40):
She's like, shure, oh hell, oh hell.

Speaker 7 (38:47):
She said, we could go back to the We could
go back to the to the to my house is
right around the corner. I'm like, oh no, I just
wanted to get a whopper, we said Wright and Burger
king like, I want people to be around and see this.
I don't know what the hell I walk into the
whole gargoyle popped out.

Speaker 6 (39:01):
But look, you win some, you lose some with the
party line.

Speaker 5 (39:08):
Oh man, oh man, that is that is.

Speaker 4 (39:12):
That is hilarious and it's and it's even more hilarious
because I know exactly where that is and I know
exactly that is.

Speaker 5 (39:20):
That is so funny.

Speaker 2 (39:22):
Oh Man, oh Man, oh man, doctor K do you
have any what was there party lines in New York.

Speaker 8 (39:36):
I actually grew up in in Central Florida, Okay, And
during the time when I've been dating and doing the things,
that's where That's where I was, And I was in
the AIM the AIM chat rooms, right if anybody hashtag
a s L if you know what that if you
know what that was?

Speaker 9 (39:58):
And I remember meeting this in the chat room and
he was like talking to me up.

Speaker 8 (40:03):
I was like sixteen seventeen and talking it up and he's,
you know, oh, I want to take you on a date.

Speaker 9 (40:08):
Where you live?

Speaker 8 (40:09):
I live right ound the corner from you. The whole time,
I'm like communicating with my mom. I'm like, Mom, this
guy want, says me on a date. He sounds so cool.
He says, he's eighteen, blah blah blah. She's like, eighteen,
what do you want to do talking to a sixteen
year old? He's you know, my mom is you know,
old West Indian mother. So this man comes to the house.
The eighteen year old showed up with a beer belly,

(40:30):
a receding hairline. It was back here. It wasn't just
receding here. It was receding back here, and all the
rest of it was Gray an eighteen year old. The
man said he was eighteen years old. Yes, he did,
talking about he wanted to take me for ice cream.
My mom was like, he's a Java. After my mother's
screaming he's a Jama, les Sir I said, she's West Indian,

(40:54):
so she's going ya, she's screaming and she came out.
My mother is famous for coming out to any guy
that I dated. Back in the day. She was famous
for telling them that she had a cutlass. Well this
time she actually came out with the cutlass to chase.

Speaker 5 (41:09):
This guy away from them.

Speaker 9 (41:13):
She was famous. She was famous for the cutlass stories.

Speaker 8 (41:16):
She's always about to chase somebody with the cutless, except
this time she actually chased the man away with the cutless.

Speaker 9 (41:20):
Very proud to be her daughter. Elizabeth M. Campbell, Doctor
Campbell's the second because I was the first.

Speaker 4 (41:26):
But anyway, folks, we have our news segment, look at
this coming out next. This is the Morning Experienced folks,
and as promised, our new segment, look at this where

(41:49):
we talk about.

Speaker 5 (41:50):
What's going on around the internet. So team the Radio audience.

Speaker 4 (42:15):
A look at at at just to let you know
what the team is looking at. Uh, there is this
prank where where waiters are taking food from people while
they are still eating.

Speaker 5 (42:30):
So look at this, SiZ, take a look. What are
your thoughts?

Speaker 7 (42:36):
If you really want to get as salted at work,
go ahead and try to take my plate. But I'm
still I don't care who set you up for, who
tried to make the joke out of it. Go ahead
and go ahead and try to take that plate. It's
bad enough that waiters already come over and actually housed
the food when you got a mouthful of food and
I'm okay, everything's good. So now you're just gonna take
my plate, we're gonna have a problem. They're gonna they
gonna need the community from Chicago to get together and

(42:58):
help you out after this one.

Speaker 5 (43:01):
Doctor gag.

Speaker 9 (43:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (43:03):
So, as a tarist, one of the things that's in
our profile is we love food. So if you take
my food, I'm gonna turn I'm gonna flip all the
tables in the restaurant. I'm knocking all this stuff over
in here, and I'm gonna make sure that I have
food for a year for free from one of y'all,
the person who set the prank up or the restaurant.
Don't play with my food. Don't do it to me, baby.

Speaker 4 (43:25):
Yeah, that just seems like a wrong kind of prank,
pranking with food.

Speaker 7 (43:31):
So yeah, I mean, but just the fact that they
that they touch their touching or breathing or whatever around
your food that you're still actively eating, like Doug, don't,
I don't. I don't know, Like you're not gonna just
walk around the table or walk a past somebody else's
table with my food. Like Noah, I want a fresh
plate now, I want every fresh and I'm not paying
for a new plate. I'm paying for the same thing

(43:51):
I already paid for.

Speaker 8 (43:52):
I want it fresh for a week. I want my dinner.
I want my custom dinners for one week. I'll pick
them up in the drive stree, thank you so much.
And the pickup uh uh yeah.

Speaker 4 (44:01):
And and like a producer I just said, she said,
I fight somebody for touching my plate. They're definitely going
to have to make me a new plate real big
backs know how I feel. And then says I'm tables
because yes, yes, that's what that's what I'm doing to
everybody that they had showed in this video. They are

(44:21):
They all were very very you know, mild manner.

Speaker 1 (44:25):
Hey, what are you doing?

Speaker 12 (44:26):
Dope? Stop stop, I'm not done.

Speaker 5 (44:28):
Like they definitely got the right ones.

Speaker 4 (44:31):
And when I say they got the right ones, I
don't mean the black version got They.

Speaker 9 (44:39):
Were too calm.

Speaker 8 (44:40):
If somebody snatching my food in the middle of eating
the amount of roughest, they would have to put me
out the restaurant, Like that's what probably would have happened,
because I was I was cussing everybody out, absolutely for sure.

Speaker 11 (44:51):
Yea.

Speaker 6 (44:52):
And everybody's like, it's a joke. It's a joke.

Speaker 8 (44:54):
Yeah, funny, they say, he hell.

Speaker 4 (45:02):
You got one more one more video for look at
this continuing our look at this segment.

Speaker 5 (45:09):
Hey, team, that's okay, look at this.

Speaker 9 (45:12):
It's two moms, Rihanna and Beyonce. Who would you say
is the most beautiful mom in the room if we're
in your room, like me and you in your room?

Speaker 6 (45:22):
Yeah with Beyonce and Rihanna?

Speaker 9 (45:25):
Yeah who that says.

Speaker 6 (45:26):
It was beautiful mom?

Speaker 11 (45:27):
Yeah, we are in the room.

Speaker 9 (45:30):
Are they standing at this sit team, No, we're just
in learning, doesn't matter. We're standing all Okay, everybody's signing okay, beyond.
His ship.

Speaker 6 (45:40):
Is older than Rihanna, and a ship after birth still
looks nice.

Speaker 9 (45:44):
Are you serious? I said, we are in the room, okay, Beyonce,
it I think beyond.

Speaker 5 (45:50):
So so.

Speaker 4 (45:53):
As you see, this is like a train you see
coming that you can't stop because I'm.

Speaker 8 (45:57):
Like, oh, Robert, he very much not only I would
say he's clearing the brightest crown in the box. He
he also very much forgot his wife was in the room.
My word, honey, he said, it's.

Speaker 9 (46:15):
Just we're in the room. Well, said Rihanna.

Speaker 8 (46:18):
He forgot anybody else existed, So I mean, even what
else do you say? And the look on his face
that keep the hilarious part about this is he's absolutely contemplating.

Speaker 9 (46:30):
He is.

Speaker 8 (46:31):
It's hard to he's sweating or making a decision that
does not include his wife. Oh Lord, have mercy.

Speaker 5 (46:37):
Then he said, Beyonce.

Speaker 6 (46:38):
Shape.

Speaker 7 (46:41):
It was like you saw him getting different shovels to
dig deeper in there, and you're like, brother, no, stop,
won't answer.

Speaker 6 (46:50):
Sir all but he was going in.

Speaker 7 (46:54):
But but the sad thing is is that he was
genuine about it. He was really thinking, like you know what,
are they Are they standing? You know, they're sitting like, bruh,
listen to the question again, big dog, like this ain't
this ain't one of your man's in him asking you this.

Speaker 6 (47:07):
This is this is your this is.

Speaker 7 (47:08):
Your the mother and your children asking you this, and
you're just like, well, hold on now is it Rihanna
and Beyonce and they're standing at the same time.

Speaker 6 (47:16):
And then after her after birth, she had a good shape. Bruh.
I felt bad for him.

Speaker 7 (47:21):
I felt bad for him because that's another newly divorced
person on the planet.

Speaker 6 (47:25):
Right.

Speaker 9 (47:27):
She tried to give him a clue, like we are
in the.

Speaker 8 (47:29):
Room, it's all I'm here too, in the room.

Speaker 6 (47:33):
He didn't get it.

Speaker 8 (47:33):
He was he wasn't anywhere near in the room with
the Nope, he was he might not have been in
the room, that's how far away from the question he was,
lor Matt Mercy.

Speaker 4 (47:41):
The funniest thing is is like I felt like he
just automatically qualified his wife, like he he just went
straight too, all right, Beyonce and Rihanna, like because she said,
you know, we're all in the room, and it didn't
click like oh oh okay.

Speaker 5 (47:57):
It felt like he was like Okay, so.

Speaker 9 (48:00):
Uh yeah, he didn't.

Speaker 8 (48:02):
He didn't even think she was in the room, didn't didn't.
He didn't even get far by she went in the room. Okay,
that was his excuse. That's that's what That's what he's
probably gonna say.

Speaker 7 (48:11):
He was looking like, you know why I got with you.
I'm trying to stay here for a long term in America,
like you know why, you know why we together?

Speaker 6 (48:19):
You ain't the main the sharpest looker out here, no man, folks.

Speaker 4 (48:26):
That was Look at this our segment, our new segment
to the Morning Show where we take a look at
videos around the internets this morning experienced folks, thank you
for joining us.

Speaker 5 (48:37):
I hope you like that new segment.

Speaker 4 (48:39):
Look at this, it is here you stay ship, You
and Scotty gonna be on one on Wednesday.

Speaker 6 (48:48):
Yeah, Hey, stuff happens.

Speaker 7 (48:52):
Stuff happens, but happen to be Tuesday, and you know hey,
big shout out to producer Isla. She held it down
with us today, So looking forward to doing more stuff,
and I shot out at.

Speaker 6 (49:01):
Her, absolutely, I can't.

Speaker 8 (49:04):
I am so excited about with me segment. I hope
we should do that like more and more. I'm super
excited about it and this was a great show y'all.

Speaker 4 (49:12):
Yes, yes it was. Bring you the labs and bring
you the news. Oh roll than one.

Speaker 6 (49:18):
It is a.

Speaker 5 (49:19):
Rule run this is it morning.

Speaker 6 (49:22):
Ex.

Speaker 13 (49:28):
Mabby, just take a many think about what you can
do to the billy.

Speaker 1 (49:33):
Want you let this gollia to me go in the
game by everything we've been through, belly one, you says
the one like you? Sorry you'd say what you say
that every little thing I do. Let's get your questioning

(49:54):
my intentions. Find something I can't trust you? You should know.

Speaker 12 (49:59):
How would time before I hurt you?

Speaker 1 (50:01):
You're that brushes and I.

Speaker 3 (50:04):
Just can't leave you alone. No, lay, You'll make.

Speaker 1 (50:16):
It a lot of to keep slippy and then need

(50:37):
you and my love. I'm a lot of stuff. Fee
you tell me everything's now okay?

Speaker 3 (50:45):
Still like to see very clear you'll unlessen what you
will say.

Speaker 1 (50:49):
I'll stuck trying to find the piece of me you complete.

Speaker 12 (50:54):
You just gotta realize that let me with you next.

Speaker 1 (50:58):
To mental no mistake. Maybe don't you know.

Speaker 3 (51:02):
That that's same?

Speaker 1 (51:04):
But that God is dying?

Speaker 3 (51:06):
Come trying to like that's w.

Speaker 1 (51:11):
Don't you know why not knowing? Because you're pain of it.
Maybe no.

Speaker 13 (51:19):
Let it.

Speaker 6 (51:22):
Just that.

Speaker 13 (51:24):
You're making it out man, So.

Speaker 1 (51:37):
As we keep sleeping, father, you're.

Speaker 13 (51:41):
Saying, tell me you said, just that ship just still
naming in Surmay with no loud.

Speaker 1 (51:52):
When you're strong, just get me some sing, tell me
some I'll tell me. You bake it, you get make it. No, non't.

Speaker 13 (52:33):
Let let's just go.

Speaker 1 (52:39):
Get you.

Speaker 12 (52:41):
Mary and keeps happen.

Speaker 3 (52:55):
Let me just take commny, think about what you've got,
you really

Speaker 1 (53:00):
Want to leave, and let vice go
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