Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
Good morning.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
You're listening to the morning Experience. I am Marque s Lupton.
That is Shoesy, get busy. That is doctor Kamika Campbell,
and that is Scott Take Scotty.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
What's going on, brother? How you feeling Listen?
Speaker 3 (00:19):
I was feeling down, oh man, But I saw that
I saw some football this weekend.
Speaker 4 (00:27):
And I'm looking I'm feeling a little dapper. That's what
I would say that I'm feeling a little bittle more hammer.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
Da oh shiz. How about you?
Speaker 5 (00:38):
My sentiments exactly when your team puts up, there's nothing
like seeing this team that was so confident gets smacked
right in the mouth. But happy Wednesday, everybody. It is
the middle of the week. We have made it here.
Speaker 1 (00:50):
Oh man. The enemy of the enemy, the enemy of
my enemy is my friend. Uh doctor.
Speaker 6 (00:57):
I do not know what the sportsball is doing, but
I it is my favorite day of the week, which
is wish for Wednesdays. I am always wishing that we
had a functioning government.
Speaker 2 (01:06):
Yes, yes, folks, we will talk about that non functioning
government later on in Microwave News.
Speaker 1 (01:14):
We have a jam packed program for you today.
Speaker 2 (01:18):
As you know, it is Wednesday, so we have our
TMME Sports and Scores with Scotty and then we have
our top ten.
Speaker 1 (01:27):
Dare we say, the critically acclaimed top ten.
Speaker 2 (01:31):
Bye, Shizzy, get busy, and you know we have our
main story as well. So folks, it's a jam pack program.
Like you know, I like to say thank you for
joining us and telebrind and tell a friend that the
best thing that they can have is the Morning Experience.
Speaker 1 (01:48):
You're listening to the Morning Experience.
Speaker 2 (01:51):
Just to let you know, we begin each show with
the Microwave News.
Speaker 1 (01:56):
Look at that. My sister is listening, she says, Ola.
Speaker 2 (02:00):
Just to let you know, Brittany, we always talk about
you in such the most uplifting way, fashion and form, Sister,
don't let that.
Speaker 5 (02:10):
Man lie to you.
Speaker 4 (02:14):
You talk about you all the time.
Speaker 6 (02:17):
The only part that's true about that is we talk
about you all the time.
Speaker 2 (02:25):
And so our first story for Microwave News comes from
the Grio and and ICE arrests are are are cracking
down after the DC Guard shooting, and ICE arrests of
Afghans are on the rise in the wake up the
National Guard attack. Immigration lawyers say immigration lawyers and authorities
say arrests of Afghans are on the rise following the
(02:46):
shooting of two National Guard members in Washington, d C.
Speaker 5 (02:50):
Ships the typical American we do, we'll be reactive. Its
set of proactive. So I guess everybody else can do
your dirt right now because they only focusing on one
beause that's the only problem where it's happened in that
So everybody else, this's your time to shine yo.
Speaker 2 (03:05):
Right right, doctor k They're like lasering in on Afghans.
Speaker 6 (03:10):
They are. And it's very unfortunate because this person was
let in under the Trump administration and was not vetted
properly according to them. And isn't it suspicious? Those are
the suspicious that this man comes all the way from
the West coast to the East coast to commit this
this heinous act. What's that about. I'm not going to
(03:31):
jump too far into my conspiracy theory, but isn't that suspicious?
Speaker 5 (03:35):
Right?
Speaker 1 (03:35):
Very very very suspicious.
Speaker 2 (03:37):
Our next story, uh, this this comes from a Facebook
and Lonnie Johnson, the brilliant inventor behind the iconic super soaker,
has been awarded seventy three million dollars in unpaid royalties
more than twenty years after the creation of his groundbreaking
water gun. Johnson, who initially developed a super soaker in
nineteen eighty two, entered into a licensing agreement with Hashburro,
(03:59):
but for years he was underpaid for his invention success.
Speaker 3 (04:02):
Scotty, Man, get your money, get your money, Get your money.
Speaker 4 (04:10):
That's what I'm talking about. That boy over there, listen,
who didn't want the super Soca with the backpack with
the extra.
Speaker 5 (04:18):
Water two thousand xtra two thousand.
Speaker 3 (04:22):
Man, Listen, he is every kid in the nineties hero. Okay,
that stuper Soca was life. Yeah, get your money, yeah,
and and shitz.
Speaker 2 (04:31):
If I would have known that it was created by
a black man back then, you know, I might have
had more.
Speaker 5 (04:37):
I don't know about all that, because I know my
mom couldn't even afford the regular supersiler we had. We
had the dollar Tree dips, the ones you got two
uses out of him, and after that it was a
rap on those. But yo, Scotty, I'm right there with you.
Play some qu childish gambino. Get your this is America,
Get your money, black man, money man.
Speaker 2 (04:59):
Indeed, and our final story comes from a complex dot
com and Joe Rule believes that fifty cent has enough
allegations for him to produce a documentary expose about the
Rapper and media's businessman On on Sunday of the Rapper
called al fifty after and called him a hypocrite for
executive producing the four part Netflix documentary Sean Combs The
(05:22):
Reckoning about the disgrace bad Boy Entertainment founder doctor.
Speaker 1 (05:25):
K joh Rul. He he's like, you know what, Karma
may come back around.
Speaker 6 (05:32):
He is playing a dangerous game because fifty is like
two trillion, and oh so I hope you have all
his receipts in order. But you cannot come for fifty
and miss because he will bury you. And he is
the best troll on the planet. And we can debate
on this. The man is the best troll on the planet.
Speaker 3 (05:50):
Scottie, Listen, I don't think it goes well for anybody come,
you know, especially if I already be you once. You
know what I'm saying, like, don't don't try to come
around this train track. And me and my wife watched
the Reckoning.
Speaker 4 (06:06):
Listen. If it's one thing fifty six can do, he
can produce, Okay, he listen. He getting up with that
eating off that rabbit. That banman is executive producing his.
Speaker 3 (06:15):
Ass Okay that Bama is good. So shout out to
shout out to fifty.
Speaker 2 (06:21):
And uh shitz should should should y'all rue want this fight?
Speaker 5 (06:27):
Joah ru. This is what we fear about with Drake,
Like you got smacked around and then years later you're like,
I can make a documentary like he can. If you
don't sit your ass down somewhere, it's over. Just just
take your loss ahead on, go to the next round, bro,
Like it's over for that one.
Speaker 6 (06:44):
It feels like he's trying to job facts. He feels
like he's trying to like we lived in the ninety nine,
the two thousands, not even the ninety nine and two thousands.
And I want him to sit down and I want
him to hush because uh fifty has seven hundred and
forty two seasons of we're under his belt.
Speaker 5 (07:03):
First said when he said, look is the day.
Speaker 3 (07:07):
What thinks while we're talking about party should have never
killed off ghost.
Speaker 4 (07:13):
But that's a whole other conversation.
Speaker 6 (07:16):
They die, don't get me stuck.
Speaker 4 (07:20):
That's why doctor like you, you don't get the goat,
You don't.
Speaker 6 (07:27):
Get my salad will be right over here in the
corner talking about time ago.
Speaker 2 (07:36):
Folks, as you know, it is Wednesday, so so we
have our story. Our main story for today comes from
Afro Tech and billionaires. Michael Bloomsburg is making some headway,
so listen to the morning Experience. Thank you for joining us,
and our main story for today again comes from Afro
(07:57):
Tech and a major new investment.
Speaker 1 (08:00):
I'm billionaire.
Speaker 2 (08:00):
Michael Bloomberg is helping expand educational access for tech students
through a partnership that brings K through twelve learning directly
through the campuses of HBCUs. Bloomberg Philanthropy, together with the
national education organization City Fund, has committed twenty million dollars
ten million dollars each to support public charter schools and
(08:21):
connect students with early college opportunities at nearby HBCUs.
Speaker 1 (08:26):
And this is according to a press release, Doctor k
I am in love with this.
Speaker 2 (08:32):
They are doing this in Alabama, and this feels like
this can be you know, like a theater type thing
into HBCUs.
Speaker 1 (08:41):
Where do you stand as educator?
Speaker 6 (08:43):
Yeah, I really love this. I'm always gestical of Michael Bloomberg,
but this is great. I think that ten million dollars
is twenty million dollars is a nice substantial number. We
like the duk numbers like ten million. We want millions
of dollars going to these kinds of efforts. Additionally, we
already know that there is a there's going to be
(09:06):
a a little bit of a gap. We call this
the the the divide. The it's basically the digital divide,
we called the Internet divide. All these different things that
we want to try and close, and I'm hoping money
like this goes into closing those divides, especially in a
(09:27):
state like Alabama, who has been just kind of systematic
and keeping their own students back. So there's education device,
there's digital divides, there's Internet divides, et cetera. And we
are just hoping that this it's a drop in the bucket,
but hopefully it'll go a long way to closing that device.
Speaker 1 (09:46):
Yeah, yeah, hopefully shiz there.
Speaker 2 (09:50):
There's schools like INOTEP in Philly that kind of mimics
something like this, but there's no like feeder program into
like Lincoln or Cheney.
Speaker 1 (09:59):
Where do you staying on this?
Speaker 5 (10:01):
I mean, y'all got doctor Umar up out of here,
but no shout out, shout out, shout out to Mackenzie Scott.
I'm I'm we're gonna this is gonna go down in history.
This is going to be known as the McKenzie Scott effect.
Where it's cool, it's cool to give money, you know,
we it's cool to have us educated, we are, we're
gonna be and everything. So you know, I'm I'm I'm
(10:24):
all for it. It's America, so you always take everything
with a grain of salt. I'm just looking like, where
is the kickback going to be based off of doing this?
You get a kickback somewhere down the line, because you know,
it's always something with America. But until that happens, I'm all.
Speaker 4 (10:40):
For you know.
Speaker 3 (10:42):
It's you said about like she's you know how like
if you're in football, like you know, you try to
get like the leaderboard or something like she's on everybody's
leader board. Like literally she is like the top donor
for everybody, like gift gift get, mckinnie's got real. She's
going to everybody's cookout, you know what I'm saying. So
maybe you want to start an HBCU, you know what
(11:03):
I'm saying.
Speaker 5 (11:06):
It.
Speaker 6 (11:08):
But you know this goes towards her the goal of
like spending down her entire fortune, right, So this is
lit like sticking to the word of what you said,
you're going to do amazing.
Speaker 2 (11:17):
And I feel like, you know this, this, this is
what billionaires are supposed to do.
Speaker 1 (11:22):
This is why they they exist.
Speaker 2 (11:24):
There's they're supposed to, you know, reinvest into the country
just like this.
Speaker 1 (11:30):
But we're seeing time and time and time and time again.
Speaker 2 (11:34):
Doctor k there's just this extraction and there's justice exploitation
rather than an investment.
Speaker 6 (11:41):
Yeah, because my first question is why is anybody not
somebody needs to hold Elon Muska for all the money
he is on approaching being a trillionaire. Do you know
how ridiculous that is in a country where the bottom
fifty percent of people are barely making in a living.
That's that's ridiculous. And I feel like there's a very large,
(12:07):
like I don't know, billionaire Aura. People want to be billionaires.
It's not achievable, but there is a good life that
is achievable for many more people than three billionaires. And
I feel like we keep have to keep putting our
our putting our foot down when it comes to, you know,
demanding that these folks who are making a lot of
money off of the American people and American workers that
(12:29):
they pay their fair share back into society.
Speaker 1 (12:32):
Yeah, yeah, absolutely, shiz uh.
Speaker 2 (12:35):
Before we head out, you mentioned you mentioned umar uh.
Speaker 1 (12:41):
That's that's that's that's a shot of the day.
Speaker 2 (12:44):
But but but he does stand out because he was
out there fronting, you know, for what it seems like
years to what some are accomplishing, you know, in in
months now. Money is an issue, yes, but it just
seems like, you know, it might have been some cap there.
Speaker 5 (13:04):
Hey listen, I just report. I just call it like
I see it. Brother. No, but it could be because,
like you said, things move fast now. But again, with
with that being said, also, we are in a microwave
society where we want everything fast. So if if somebody
doesn't have the funds like that and they got to
take time to build it up, I'm not saying we
(13:26):
didn't give him a chance. I don't know if we
gave him long enough a chance. You know, we want
stuff immediately. We got to see results immediately. So I
don't know how the school would have did, but he
was I just gave the example of how he was trying.
Speaker 1 (13:37):
Just dig dig it. Folks.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
Again, we have a jam pack program. We have so
much on this program to give again. We got sports
with Scotty on the other side, and then we have
the critically acclaimed I'm critically acclaimed Top ten.
Speaker 1 (13:59):
Get busy. So all right, so we're talking about.
Speaker 2 (14:03):
This billionaire give back and really getting into the details
of this Bloomberg and him opening up what seems like
this pipeline to HVCU. So for notes that the new
funding supports two schools in Alabama's Black Belt region, an
(14:24):
area historically underserved in public education. The first is the
DC Wolf Charter School in Shorter, a redevelopment of the
former DC Wolf Elementary School that is expected to open
and fall twenty twenty six, just minutes from Tuskegee University.
The second I Dream Big Academy, which opened in August
of twenty twenty five on the campus of Stillman College,
(14:45):
located in Tuscaloosa. So, Scotty, as a fam you fan,
can you see or would you like to see something
like this happen, you know, in Florida as well, where
there's this pipeline, because this could also affect sports as well.
Speaker 3 (15:05):
No, I absolutely would love to see it, and I
think from being honest, I think HBCUs have done I
haven't done their due diligence in making HBC's more open online.
Like I think they will have a bigger alumni base
and bigger because again they want enrollment, which is great.
But you know, Morehouse could have been University of Phoenix
(15:28):
before University of Phoenix, you know what I'm saying, Like
it could have been a place where you're really reaching
a diaster of people to where they're like, man, I
graduated from more House or I got a Morehouse program
more I did because I think Harvard or Yale, that's PK.
I think Harvard Yale does like these programs that they
hand out that you can just do an isolated program
(15:49):
and say it came from Yale, right, So I think
adding that is great, But I also think that adding
a better online platform for all HBCUs line education be
better best served for the whole community.
Speaker 6 (16:05):
Big time agree, Big time agree that access is so
important and what you're talking about is something that this
kind of like online platform for HBCUs people are even
going except further and says connect those they want something
where hbcs are connected and networked so that they can
draw upon the expertise and experience of all hbcs, particularly
in an online format. So I would love something like that.
Speaker 2 (16:26):
I agree, Yeah, this really sounds like something that, all right,
well let's work, let's work smarter, not harder, because we
are in uh era now where you know those dollars
may not be as fluid as they used to be
because of this current administration is now you mentioned on
(16:48):
that there's some there's some concern here.
Speaker 1 (16:51):
What is your concern.
Speaker 5 (16:52):
Rooted in America? Where do you want to start at?
The problem is is that every time we see something
like this, and and like you said, it's we see
(17:13):
it's where it's starting to be an influx of this happening,
which is which is good. But usually when stuff like
this happens in America, there's always something behind it. There's
some type of kickback, there's some type of oh well
we put these like this. This donor gave this large donation,
so instead of just being accepted as a charitable gift
or charitable donor, will make them part of the executive
(17:33):
board here. Then they start adding their people and then
it just breaks it. It's a everything is a trickle effect,
and America knows what it's doing when it comes to
stuff like this, so I'm happy for it. But look,
I've been black for a long time, so I just
want to make sure that everything is on the up
and up.
Speaker 2 (17:49):
Oh dig how about you, Scotty, We we are we
are seeing well. I would like to see more more
of this, more of this connection between high schools and HBCUs,
between HBCUs and HBCUs, this this more collective effort to
(18:11):
get kids and bodies into those institutions and organizations.
Speaker 4 (18:17):
Yeah, I think it'd be.
Speaker 3 (18:18):
I think everybody wants a theater system, right, like a
feeder system to their program and a feeder system to
their HBCUs out because again, a lot of programs do it.
You know in Atlanta, I think they have like a
like a little little Kapitalas and little qs and everybody
has a feeder thing to do with they what they want.
Speaker 4 (18:36):
I think it.
Speaker 3 (18:36):
Would be great to have an HBCU feeder system into
getting into programs, kind of like what Promise does with
Acrin University. You know what I'm saying, Like how if
you graduate from Promise, you get a full ride to.
Speaker 4 (18:48):
Acro University, right, so pay by lebron.
Speaker 3 (18:50):
But I just think more things like that give us
more well educated men and women in the world. And
now you get you know, more graduates from HBCUs and
you just keep keep the funnel going right.
Speaker 2 (19:03):
And we see this with with with those real ritzy schools,
you know, with those private schools that we see, you know,
on on the CW. You know, those schools are fe
feeder schools and into places like your Princeton's, in the
places like your Harvard's. So why not watch Frinds repeat
and do that the same just as much, folks, so
(19:25):
much more to get into. We are discussing a billionaire,
billionaire Bloomberg giving back, so to outline this some more,
in twenty twenty four, the former New York City mayor
Bloomberg made a six hundred million dollar donation benefiting medical
(19:48):
schools at four HBCUs and this was previously reported by CNN.
The announcement of bloomberg philanthropies recent Temian dott A gift
comes during a significant wave of philothraphic investments in HBCUs.
Over the past several months, HBCUs have received more than
eight hundred million in new funding, and I feel like
(20:12):
this is eight hundred million that is desperately needed, especially
as the borders are being closed.
Speaker 1 (20:19):
Doctor k Yeah.
Speaker 6 (20:21):
I think that we're going to see a very interesting
flip in the next five years of how college enrollment goes.
A lot of our institutions, when they talk about minority
investment in education, they're talking about international students. So this
to me is an unfortunate side effect, but a needed
side effect of a refocus on native black and brown
(20:43):
people in this country. So they could have done that
without doing what they're doing now, but it's happening. Another
piece to this that I think is important to understand
is we have had a lot of black and investment
in black and brown students going to pwis, right predominant
white institutions where we will do ramp programs and gap
(21:05):
and bridge and all these different things to get black
and brown students into the pwis and those the existence
of those types of programs are lower at HBCUs, And
an issue with that is those programs taught like the
skills that folks believe are needed to succeed in your
first year of college. So if you didn't have a
(21:27):
program like that and you weren't ready to go into
your first year of college, you got to an HBCU
and you were still behind right, it's still a college
and so, but they would accept those students because there
just weren't. They're just one of those kind of programs.
So things like this where we are doing an intentional
investment and disrupting the school to prison pipeline. This is
(21:49):
a key to disrupting that. It's very important. Pouring money
into a school to elementary and secondary school into college
pipeline versus a school into the schools to prison pipe
line is crucial. But that's where my comparison would be,
how much money are we pouring into prisons that we
should be pouring into colleges, especially HBCUs.
Speaker 1 (22:11):
Yeah, we have a comment from Isaiah Perry.
Speaker 2 (22:14):
He says, unfortunately, this administration is suing universities that have
DEI access programs like the ones you guys are discussing.
So I feel like, shiz, this is a way to
kind of circumvent that, because you know, they're like, oh,
I'm giving eight hundred million of my own money.
Speaker 5 (22:34):
Yeah, I know that. I know that you and CF
the United Negro College Fund gott to be sitting there
with the author fist just pizzling. Y'all had this bread,
all this. Now, now it's cool to give our money.
We've been we've been trying to get money since we've
been calling black people negroes. And now we see and
(22:54):
now y'all come up with eight hundred million in two weeks, Like.
Speaker 6 (23:00):
You are billionaires. You just found this money.
Speaker 2 (23:03):
You had this name money, the money. Yeah, and Scotty
before we had out. I can't help but think that
like these these billionaires know that, like, no, we need
to keep the blacks educated.
Speaker 6 (23:22):
Listen.
Speaker 3 (23:23):
I don't know if they feel that way, honestly, because listen,
you know, education takes you places, right, education, you know.
But my thing is to me, I think there should
be more investment into trades.
Speaker 4 (23:38):
I think if you that's just mind. That's always been.
Speaker 3 (23:40):
My thing, is that I think giving somebody a trade plumbing, electrician,
you know, like letting these because a lot of people
are not college like we act like everybody's supposed to
go to college. That is not what it is, right,
Like everybody is a college graduate or a college person.
So to give somebody a trade that they can feed
their family, have a sustainable life, have something that where
(24:02):
they can start their own businesses. Give other people jobs
as well. Now you're you're now you're talking about a
community that you're building in a funnel pipeline of just
successful black men and women, and that to me can
also be just as impactful as college graduates. Fact, I
know a college graduate who went for a freaking criminal
(24:24):
psychology degree. She's working at t s A. Okay, so yeah,
I got a lot of student loans too.
Speaker 5 (24:31):
She sounds like she'd be doing extra at her job,
like I can tell the way he's walking as a pound.
Speaker 1 (24:40):
Man. So let's read some comments here. This comes from
my sister.
Speaker 2 (24:45):
She says, a lot of college educated people I can't
even find jobs. Facts, and that is that is that,
that is very very very factual. But also at the
same time, though, you know, as as college folks can't
find jobs, we also need to look at there are
jobs being eliminated as well, and like hundreds of thousands
(25:06):
of jobs are being eliminated. And like, you know, I
look at myself when I went into when I went
into school undergrad, I was like, I want to be
a DJ, a radio DJ, and going in like there
was a lot and then coming out there wasn't. Yeah,
(25:27):
and I feel like that that happens with a lot
of students going in the industry is something and industry
can change in two year ships and then you know
it's something completely different.
Speaker 4 (25:38):
Yeah, it's the model. I mean, it's AI.
Speaker 3 (25:40):
You know, we talked about in numerous shows about what
AI is doing and how it's taken over. But at
the same time, again that's why I'm so AI ain't
doing bumming, bumming plumbing.
Speaker 4 (25:49):
AI ain't doing electrician work. AI ain't doing roofing. AI
building houses.
Speaker 3 (25:54):
You know, like you you gotta do something like Luke,
collar jobs are not who who?
Speaker 4 (26:00):
I know what? Good? Hey, I know a lot of
eighth fact.
Speaker 3 (26:04):
Okay, you shoot, you live in Texas and know how
an air conditioned you did?
Speaker 4 (26:08):
See what you willing to faith? You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 3 (26:10):
So again, but again I think it's it goes into
the you're going people are going into massive, a massive
mounts of debt to be a school team, like people
are going into massive debts to be you know, an
art teacher or you know, uh, I don't know it.
Speaker 4 (26:26):
Just it has to make sense.
Speaker 3 (26:27):
So I think a lot of things are the tuition
is getting higher, the pay is not raising.
Speaker 4 (26:32):
You know what I'm saying, like it's just it's.
Speaker 3 (26:34):
So much going on you really have to kind of
narrow now is the it is the juice worth to squeeze,
you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 4 (26:42):
So that's really what it comes down to when you
when you go to college.
Speaker 1 (26:46):
Uh yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (26:47):
And and I'm I'm I'm loving the fact that that
folks like Mackenzie and folks like Bloomberg now are making
these investments so that people won't have to go in
entity that, you know, if they want to get an
art history degree.
Speaker 7 (27:02):
You know.
Speaker 2 (27:03):
So, folks, we got one more segment to uh talk
about this before we get to the funny. I know
you're waiting waiting for that for the critically acclaimed Shusy
Get Dizzy top ten, So stay with us. That is
coming up before we get to h Chezy Get Busy's
top ten. You know, we like to Advanter a little
(27:23):
bit and and of Scotti. I indulged your show today
and and you had the full fam you garb on
and everything was was.
Speaker 1 (27:35):
Was loving every minute of it.
Speaker 2 (27:37):
Can you tell the folks more about about your YouTube show,
because I don't think we talked about it yet on here.
Speaker 3 (27:44):
No, you know, I try to stay a little low key.
You know, I don't really be doing too much, you know,
being the number one. You know that that looks like
a little wait no, you know we do everything HBC
sports Man in the HBC te hot Tea. You know
what I'm saying, I love me a little. I love
me some TV, love me some gossip. Listen I news right,
(28:07):
so nah listen for me. Allscript is like the name, like,
I take it wherever I want to take it. You
know what I'm saying, Like if it starts about NBCU
talking about Bwis or whatever, but I just want to
have a good time.
Speaker 4 (28:19):
To laugh the joke.
Speaker 3 (28:21):
You know, I want to hear the bugions of everybody else.
And for me, I always tell people I just want
you to think. You know, my whole thing is I
put things out in the atmosphere to make you think.
Like today, I put out why not have an HBCU
football game in Africa?
Speaker 4 (28:33):
Right, trying to build the base and build the brand.
Speaker 3 (28:37):
Of HBCUs going to you know, a place where you
see people that look like you, right in bringing them
into our culture and we've been brought into their culture.
I think that'd be a great atmosphere and a great
opportunity for HBCUs.
Speaker 4 (28:50):
And to widen the recruiting net.
Speaker 1 (28:52):
Right.
Speaker 3 (28:52):
So I just again, you know, people are so quick
to think what can't happen, But if you put your
brain together and you really think about it, like man,
that that would be dope.
Speaker 5 (29:00):
Right.
Speaker 3 (29:01):
So and then you know, for black people, you gotta
be like, hey, the whites did it too, right, like
when they went to Ireland and you know what I'm saying,
you know what I'm saying, or to name, and then
they have the Georgia Tech and Florida State Game as well,
so you know, it's like it has been done before.
So let's not act like it's just like, oh my god,
we can't do it. So, you know, just having a
(29:21):
good time, man, that's that's really what we do.
Speaker 5 (29:24):
You're gonna have to get Florida teams for that one
because that's gonna be some heat. You're gonna Florida squads.
Speaker 2 (29:35):
But ya, I am all for that, like like you know,
uh fam you versus Howard and Ghana. You know, like yo, yeah,
I am, I am really all for that. So then Scotty,
how did you how did you get into that.
Speaker 4 (29:52):
So it's funny.
Speaker 3 (29:54):
I was really I thought about YouTube channel with a
friend we were doing like pro sports.
Speaker 4 (29:59):
It didn't go so well.
Speaker 3 (30:00):
He had a successful YouTube channel on the side that
he was doing, so he went back to that and
I was doing I kept doing it for another week
and a good friend of mine we were in a
black Facebook group together for YouTubers, and he was like, man, like,
I really think you should talk about HBC's right.
Speaker 4 (30:16):
What's the HBC's fort Like, like I only eve.
Speaker 3 (30:18):
Knew Morgan, Howard and Spelman and you know, the morehouse
like those those major ones.
Speaker 4 (30:23):
I didn't even know they did football and stuff like that.
Speaker 3 (30:25):
So because I'm more of a pro guy, was never
really a college guy, he was like, man, I.
Speaker 4 (30:28):
Think you'd be really great.
Speaker 3 (30:30):
And like two weeks after he told me Dion tech
down in Jackson, I did a video about Dion and
Jackson and they got twenty thousand views.
Speaker 4 (30:37):
I said, Oh, I'm not looking back. Oh I'm not.
Speaker 3 (30:39):
Oh yeah, this is the train I'm taking, you know,
all aboard, baby, And it has been like that ever since,
and I've been doing it for four years now, full
time for three Yeah.
Speaker 4 (30:50):
Yeah, that's that's what that's what it's been, all.
Speaker 5 (30:53):
Right, sawd it.
Speaker 2 (30:54):
So then for the folks that want to follow you,
For the folks that want to I'm here, what we're
talking about, where can they go?
Speaker 4 (31:03):
They can go to off script. It's spelled just like
it sounds. Okay.
Speaker 3 (31:08):
On YouTube, you'll see a little black cartoon that's me. Okay,
and uh, if you want to catch me on Twitter, listen, listen.
If you catch me on Twitter, I'm a different person.
Speaker 4 (31:18):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (31:18):
I will meet you with whatever energy you bring to me.
I just want to make that very clear. All right,
I'm very I'm Captain Petty. Sorry to smoke, don't mess
with me, Okay, I will meet you with whatever energy
you bring. If you want to follow me on Twitter,
it's offscript Underscore TV, and then on Instagram is off
offscrip Underscore TV as well.
Speaker 4 (31:35):
So catch me, man, listen. I love to have fun.
I love to talk trash. That is what I do
from the DMV.
Speaker 1 (31:42):
That's what Scotty. I'm not gonna lie. I think we're
all different people on x IF. If my mom lord
just just want to say, yeah, it.
Speaker 4 (31:58):
Looks like you got the Facebook side of you.
Speaker 3 (31:59):
Where my Pitchers family you know, hey, guys, hope everybody's
doing well, you know, on a scripture here and there.
Speaker 4 (32:07):
Twitter.
Speaker 3 (32:08):
Nah, bro, I'll bringing it to your front door.
Speaker 1 (32:13):
Yo, my Twitter.
Speaker 2 (32:15):
Sometimes I feel like, oh, just throw the whole marquise away.
Speaker 6 (32:18):
Just everybody into a terrible person. It's yeah, some of.
Speaker 5 (32:24):
Us are absolutely excited that we can't see our nobody
can see our likes Anymoreks. Welcome back to the Morning Experience.
Ladies and gentlemen. It is Wednesday, and it is time
for an all new Top ten. This week's top ten.
(32:44):
Listen to Black folk. We do a lot of things,
but one thing that we are known for is that
when it's trauma, we try to turn it into humor.
But we got to understand we still got some trauma.
A lot of our parents, and our parents and our
teachers and everybody else inflicted a lot of trauma in
our lives. So this week's top ten, we're gonna talk
about the top ten traumas that shaped us into productive
(33:06):
citizens or minutes to society.
Speaker 3 (33:09):
I don't have any Yeah, number ten.
Speaker 5 (33:18):
We all been here. Mom, if you're watching, you did this,
And I want everybody to know getting hit for crying
from getting hit that is just jam Like what am
I supposed to do? Then if you don't cry, you
still get hit? Like what am I supposed to do
at this moment? Why would you hit me for crying
because I'm crying because of you?
Speaker 6 (33:38):
I really hate I really hate this one because I
would do more if I didn't cry, then I would
cry loud and it was what you're crying for. And
then one time I snatched a belt, like if you're
gonna hit, if you're gonna hit, you're gonna hit me
for crying, hit me for not crying. I'm gonna just
take the bell? How about that? And then I had
to run away because almost died.
Speaker 2 (33:57):
Yo, because then you know what, he grabbed the don't try.
Speaker 5 (34:00):
To fight me Like I was on the end of
the belt flapping around. He was trying to get me
the hell off.
Speaker 6 (34:10):
This is literally.
Speaker 5 (34:15):
Number nine. Listen. We have a lot of trauma, y'all,
but we try to turn it into comedy even though
it is still trauma that we deal with. Number nine,
the agony of having to go pick out the weapon
that your parents were going to abuse you with. This
was just crazy, like because you had a whole thought
process going into it like if I got that that's light,
but the end of the slipper, like it snaps, so
it hits you a little harder. Like these are the
(34:38):
things that you break down.
Speaker 3 (34:39):
Lifting that switch like like that is that You're like, Okay,
I can't get the small work because she woulna make
me come back in here and get a bigger one.
Speaker 4 (34:49):
Get the biggest one. Then I'm gonna get my old
butt wook. It's like, it's just a weird space to
be in. Man, Like, choose your weapon.
Speaker 6 (34:56):
Like god right, choose your weapon that you're gonna be
harmed with. Nobody wants to do that. Who wants to
do that? I remember I went and I would choose.
I would like, I would like get something that looked like.
Speaker 1 (35:08):
This.
Speaker 6 (35:08):
I'd be like, this is is this good? How about
this little tiny one inch piece of of of wood
or a belt? You know, I would choose the smallest
thing possible. And yet it didn't. It didn't. It didn't
save me.
Speaker 5 (35:23):
But I did that between her knuckles, be like this
is cool.
Speaker 6 (35:29):
Your Your mama was absolutely about that.
Speaker 5 (35:31):
Yeah, she was going she was going to make sure,
like listen, that's what if that's what you want if
you got to feel this, so however you make it work,
let's start practicing. She'd be shadow boxing with the little
thing in between her fingers. Mom, you did this. Number
eight childhood trauma, not having your parents not be able
to afford like the times or the or the polos,
(35:53):
so you had the chaps or you had to wear
the lugs, and you had to wear the extra boot
cut jeans so they would go down and cover up
everything else. I could see it, because Lord, if somebody
pulled up your pantle so that you didn't have on
what you say you would have on, it was a
wrap for your high school career.
Speaker 4 (36:16):
I was very I was very privileged growing up. Now
said my shoes are from pay lefts are we fighting
on a site? Fighting on site?
Speaker 1 (36:29):
That that was the rule.
Speaker 4 (36:30):
Number one, You can't.
Speaker 5 (36:31):
You definitely had to show up the gym a couple
of times with the shacks on your feet.
Speaker 8 (36:36):
Right right from it says beating your kids is the
whitest thing you can do.
Speaker 6 (36:46):
Isaiah wants to start a fighting I appreciate.
Speaker 2 (36:50):
The widest, the whitest.
Speaker 4 (36:53):
That doesn't make sense to me.
Speaker 6 (36:56):
I love it.
Speaker 5 (36:57):
I want to be white people.
Speaker 6 (36:59):
Damn corporal punishment is a holdover from my supremacy. Absolutely
one corporal punishment. Let me put let me put this up.
Should have been left on the plantation.
Speaker 7 (37:09):
Amen, everything overlooking you. We're about to get into it now.
The table got.
Speaker 5 (37:20):
Me moving some stuff.
Speaker 6 (37:21):
Not have any children? No answer?
Speaker 4 (37:24):
What your answer is?
Speaker 5 (37:25):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (37:25):
Absolutely? But the other thing is to I was a child,
so it's not like I didn't live through being a child.
Speaker 3 (37:30):
Yeah, I get it, I get it. I would have
loved to see how you would have parents. I would
have loved to see how you're a parent, if you
if you have kids.
Speaker 6 (37:37):
So I will say this. I remember when my niece
first talked back to me. I wanted to smack her
in her in her face, and I was like, see,
hold over my supremacy. Hi boo, why are you see?
It was saying you can't woo. That's hard for me.
But yes, I always say to folks when people say, oh,
(37:58):
you didn't have children, I'm like, yep, but I was
a child and so were you. And did you like
getting beat?
Speaker 1 (38:02):
No?
Speaker 6 (38:03):
It wasn't fun.
Speaker 4 (38:05):
It definitely it definitely helped me out.
Speaker 3 (38:08):
I don't know, it's to me the fear of not
the fear of getting whoop kept me out of a
lot of situations.
Speaker 5 (38:17):
I still don't do stuff now because I think my
mom might whoop my ass. I'm like, you know what,
I don't even know if I'm like, yeah, my mom
might beat me.
Speaker 6 (38:23):
Like not so funny. Because everything that I got whooped for,
I absolutely do as an adult on purpose to break
myself out of the fear of being punished for the
thing that I wanted to do. Like talk a lot
like I was. I was always in trouble for talking,
so I talk even more now. I was always in
trouble for I'm a bit of I'm a bit of
(38:45):
a petty strategist, so I petty strategize around people all
the time. But it's it's cathartic because you know, I
would get in trouble for it.
Speaker 5 (38:53):
So I think the best thing we can understand from
that is it's number six.
Speaker 6 (39:06):
I need Isaiah on the show because I can't take
every week.
Speaker 5 (39:11):
Number seven. This one look school used to get school.
You got a lot of trauma coming from school too, man,
good thing I was never this person number seven having
to read aloud in school. A lot of people, a
lot of people won't read now because they think they
gotta read out loud. They used to put them on
the spot and reading. Mary had a little lamb and
(39:34):
I don't know what the hell they started reading. But
it wasn't that.
Speaker 1 (39:39):
Yeah, yah, I will say this.
Speaker 4 (39:43):
Yo.
Speaker 2 (39:44):
Because I stuttered. I stuttered so like people. People made
fun of me, you know, stuttering. But reading time, that's
the thing. When I read, I never stuttered. So when
reading time came, I was like, oh, oh, oh, it's
me Me.
Speaker 1 (40:00):
I want to me, I want to read.
Speaker 2 (40:02):
And if I was next to somebody that I know
wasn't a reader, me double me, I want to read.
Speaker 1 (40:07):
I know the person next to me, I ain't.
Speaker 3 (40:09):
Going to read.
Speaker 5 (40:10):
Yes, this guy was miche le A. He just had
the little He had this quaky voice and then he
starts singing. He got like, that's not the same way.
What is going on?
Speaker 6 (40:20):
I agree? I agree with my keys. I never had
any problems reading out loud.
Speaker 9 (40:24):
Never.
Speaker 6 (40:24):
I loved reading out loud. I wanted to read even
when even when I pronounced the words wrong, like I
would very confidently read the whore divorce on the at
the party were delitiful, like I would just read like
I would read like I do what I was saying.
(40:47):
So I loved reading, even though I was definitely pronouncing
words wrong, but it both of my confidence. I wasn't
the term.
Speaker 2 (40:55):
Yeah, let me special Questions says. I used to make
fun of people who couldn't read.
Speaker 5 (41:00):
Damn, I got a story about this. I got a
story about this, and and my brother I'm gonna get
him on here one day so we could tell the story.
But we got kicked out a Bible club for laughing
at the girl who couldn't read in the Bible club.
So we probably ruined her her whole confidence and her religion,
(41:20):
like we probably ruined all that stuff.
Speaker 6 (41:25):
Okay, sounded out, sounded out, but I'll be sounded out
wrong because whore divorce is not how you say that.
But I'll be sounded sounded out. I mean, but sounded
I always didn't work, but I would try and i'd
be helping. Y'all are not nice now now, Grease Smasheim says,
(41:47):
especially a bully who couldn't read, I'm absolutely making fun
of that person.
Speaker 2 (41:54):
Same with what Brittany said. I used to shine and sunnays, yes,
that was the.
Speaker 4 (41:59):
Time that yeah, yeah, yeah, Hebrew.
Speaker 5 (42:08):
Murray had a little land. How many lands?
Speaker 6 (42:19):
I don't know these people at all.
Speaker 1 (42:21):
I'm sorry number six.
Speaker 5 (42:24):
I got enough time to get the number six real quick.
I need number Yoh wow, number six. This is for
my two parent household kids growing up. Listen, getting in
trouble from your mom and once your dad got home,
she told them the whole story, and all your whole
(42:45):
punishment started right over it. It was fresh, you was
upstairs sleep, you didn't already got over your got over everything,
your pop coming.
Speaker 1 (42:53):
So you did what.
Speaker 5 (42:56):
It's a rat.
Speaker 9 (42:58):
Yo.
Speaker 1 (42:59):
My mom.
Speaker 2 (42:59):
I felt like she knew when my dad would come home, right,
so she'll start like down here and then like she'll
hear the door open up and show all of a
sudden turn it up. And then and he's coming home
to her yelling, and now he's like what's going on?
And I'm like, yo, you knew what you were doing.
Speaker 4 (43:19):
It set up.
Speaker 2 (43:21):
You knew he comes home at five thirty. Why could
we have this conversation at four forty six?
Speaker 6 (43:26):
Because he was coming here. That's why she need a backup.
That's why you couldn't have a conversation then. And she
needed back up. She actually knew where her backup would arrive. Amen,
the cavalry was coming, and she knew it was just
bad enough that she needed a cavalry.
Speaker 5 (43:43):
She knew it. Yeah, oh man, he just got done chilling.
We just got done chilling like I didn't, got and
got over my whooping and everything. And now here he
comes like he's fresh, angry, like I'm not even mad
about this no more, Dad, Like I apologized.
Speaker 6 (43:59):
She be her room where Marcy's is carrying on and
be like I'll be in my room like this.
Speaker 9 (44:03):
I gas yeah, ladies and gentlemen.
Speaker 5 (44:13):
That was the first five. That was the first five
of this week's top ten. You know, we are in
the middle of our top ten. This week's top ten,
we are talking about the top ten childhood traumas that
shaped us into productive citizens or minister society. Isaiah Perry
in the comments, As a child who had a stutter
(44:33):
and speech impediment, I try to count the number of
students in my row and preread my paragraph, only to
be terrified when a teacher would start popcorn reading choose
me out of order. You was going to great lengths
to be like, you know.
Speaker 4 (44:51):
I'm gonna get this. I'm gonna be ready.
Speaker 5 (44:56):
That is comparatible, comparable to what we call a parlay.
Right now, if you think you got to go in
and something just come out of nowhere and mess your
whole part layer paragraph. You already read this. I read
this three times.
Speaker 1 (45:15):
Add number five and number five more.
Speaker 5 (45:18):
Childhood trauma. Childhood trauma with your cousins having to decide
who was going to ask the parents if your cousin
could stay to night, because you have to add because
she'll say yes if you ask me bull because she
was gonna say no regardless, I'm.
Speaker 6 (45:34):
Gonna say, if you good. That's a setup all the
way through because she was gonna say no. So they
would always send me because I would at least argue
a little bit and they would feel validated in their ass.
Like my first cousin, she would go and she'd be like,
can't such and such before she can get can't such
and such spend the night? They'd be like, and I
told you not to ask again. I go out there
and I'd be like, first of all, I just want
(45:56):
to say, don't yell like I would start, you know there,
because I'd be a little hype and they're like, first
of all, little girl, I was like, well, I just
want to know these are the reasons before I say
who it is they should spend the night. And they're like,
now we're having now we're in now we're in a
parliamentary procedure. What is happening? And then I would say that.
Speaker 5 (46:13):
They didn't get yelled that so I didn't get yelled at,
Like y'all could go ahead know her answer about to bend.
Speaker 6 (46:18):
Like they'd be like absolutely not after I went through
my whole entire process.
Speaker 4 (46:21):
But it would be like a friend, like you know
what I'm saying, Like a man, ask your mom and
I'm like, you want to say you have I already
know what.
Speaker 5 (46:29):
There is to be. She might say yes if you asked.
Speaker 4 (46:34):
Me, because I already told you. He wasn't saying to night.
Speaker 5 (46:39):
And then you're still get in trouble. I'll get down
here now, UK. You told that boy to come out
here and ask and I told him see childhood. I'm
telling y'all, we all live the same life.
Speaker 6 (46:49):
I'm trying to tell y'all, I don't like I don't
like this game.
Speaker 1 (46:55):
My cousin Terrell, we sent him.
Speaker 2 (46:57):
Nobody ever said no she was the baby, and nobody
and then they called on.
Speaker 1 (47:03):
You wanta send arel down here?
Speaker 4 (47:04):
Yes, down there.
Speaker 5 (47:09):
Sorell got the highest win rate.
Speaker 2 (47:11):
Everybody still today, still today, we we we in our
big age now and he gets away with you know,
and gets all the babysitting, of course, very rude.
Speaker 5 (47:27):
Number four. Number four is again I'm telling y'all, we
live the same life. So please let me know if
this happened to you being told you're not sick because
you want to watch TV or you want to get
up and get something to eat, So now you ain't sick,
no damn more. I gotta survive, like I'm what you mean,
I'm not sick no more because I'm watching TV? What
(47:50):
am I supposed to be doing right now?
Speaker 3 (47:52):
Yo?
Speaker 2 (47:53):
I definitely held him last. I'm definitely like because like, yo,
I'm sick.
Speaker 6 (48:02):
I don't know because I was. I was always definitely ill,
so I don't even know, like I was always definitely ill,
so like I couldn't do, I couldn't. The TV would
be on, but it wouldn't matter because I was dying.
Speaker 5 (48:17):
You in the pride like, oh, you can get up
out of bed and get some to eat, but you can't.
Speaker 4 (48:26):
All I bet.
Speaker 6 (48:30):
Every time we got the flu shot, Like, you know,
you have to get the flu shot for school, and
I get the three days and they were like, why
are you sick? I'm like, you guys gave me.
Speaker 5 (48:38):
A flu shot, y'all. Y'all introduced me to the virus.
Speaker 6 (48:45):
You're trying to kill me and asking me when I
am sick. I can't even understand.
Speaker 5 (48:51):
Number three, Listen, if if, if your parents are struggling,
you know that you had a school outfit in school shoes,
and you had a home outfit, and you always you
would get in trouble for going outside with your school
shoes on. You would get damn there assassinated for going
(49:12):
outside with your school outfit on. And please don't get
a grass thing on your school pants.
Speaker 1 (49:18):
Especially in September when they're brand new.
Speaker 4 (49:21):
You got school clothes and you got play close.
Speaker 5 (49:25):
Everybody.
Speaker 4 (49:26):
Everybody know the difference school clothes. It is right now.
I'm like, do you go outside and play with school clothes?
Speaker 5 (49:37):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (49:37):
Yeah, yeah, I'm I'm a stickler about that.
Speaker 6 (49:40):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (49:40):
We we have a comment from Gariel. He says, you
ever had a crazy uncle that stayed in a room
in your grandma's house and and then continue to say
I hated when my my mother called called me upstairs
just to get the remote control on the dresser.
Speaker 6 (49:56):
Trauma. Those are, yeah, living the same life. Unfortunately, I
didn't want to say though I did not have play clothes.
My mother did not expect you to come home from
school and play. She expects you to come home and
do you homework. So play was out of order. You
need to come inside, do you homework, play very quietly
(50:18):
on the living room floor, and then go to bed.
I was traumatized. I didn't have any play clothes, but
I've been playing though. Let'll me playing though.
Speaker 5 (50:25):
Wow list it was it Darrell Deil. They let us
rite into number two because number two is getting called
from outside why you were playing? And they were like, hey,
hen me that remote over there.
Speaker 6 (50:42):
I was forty five minutes away by bike, and I
would still get called in for a remote or something
off the dresser, or something out the freezer, or something
out the fridge, get a drink out the fridge. I
was two hours away walking and somehow I would have
to run back home and get that get that.
Speaker 4 (50:57):
How did they get in contact with you?
Speaker 6 (50:59):
It's a home it's a homing device. You hear your
mother's boys from forty five miles away. It doesn't matter,
It doesn't matter where you're angry.
Speaker 4 (51:07):
That different, that's different.
Speaker 5 (51:09):
Now.
Speaker 4 (51:09):
My dad had a whistle, my dad when it was
when he was in my life.
Speaker 3 (51:15):
My dad had a whistle that he would do really
really loud, like you can hear him, like down the
street and I would just come running and he'd be like, hey,
what did you did?
Speaker 4 (51:24):
You leave them spries right there? Put them fries. I'm like, bro,
the whole time you could have put it. No, that's stuff.
That's the stuff to be killing me.
Speaker 5 (51:33):
That's the stuff, like, oh, that's real trauma. That's real
true because now you get mad when they call you
now what.
Speaker 4 (51:41):
And we already talked about what work get you in trouble?
Speaker 5 (51:44):
Yeah, and called your mom and dad all out they
name under your breath. But number one, and this is
this has been going on forever. If you watch Eddie
Burphy Raw to Be, and you know that it always
happened when your parents had company over and they was
all drunk and they woke you up or called you
(52:06):
downstairs from playing the game to do the new dance
and you had to sit there and I didn't did
the butterfly plenty.
Speaker 1 (52:11):
Of times.
Speaker 5 (52:14):
To try to show off for y'all company.
Speaker 6 (52:18):
No, no, we didn't have this because my parents, they
were much smarter than us. They had a kid's town
show in the beginning where they would laugh at us
and then they send our asses off so they could
drink very different. They would definitely send us off, would
do the new dances, but do the whole things, but
they would make it a town show, so we did
not interrupt them for the rest of the night.
Speaker 2 (52:38):
See, I wasn't talented, so so like the other kids
had to do it, and like I just watched and
it looked painful for them.
Speaker 1 (52:48):
But I never I never it. I was always expectator.
Go ahead, y'all.
Speaker 5 (52:54):
He was the stage here, like he needs some extra pillows.
Go my keys, go get the pillows.
Speaker 3 (53:01):
Plantation stuff, you know, dance for us that that plantation.
Yeah yeah, dance little timid dance like that.
Speaker 4 (53:11):
That's the plantation mindset right there.
Speaker 5 (53:14):
I am trying to tell y'all, this is trauma. This
is trauma. This is real life trumpa. We laugh and
joke with theseent real life issues that we deal with
for the rest of our lives because our parents tried
to ruin us.
Speaker 6 (53:30):
It made, it made we live a lot of memories
and I don't appreciate thank you so much.
Speaker 5 (53:36):
You gotta get it out. This is this is your therapy.
Get it out this, ladies, gentlemen, that was this week's
top ten. If you miss any of the top ten
this week or any in the previous weeks, because we
are at this was number twenty five, twenty five five.
She please make sure you hit us up at the
(53:58):
Morning Experience on g and if you want to give
it to me directly, it is at shizy get busy
on all socials. It is the Morning Experience.
Speaker 3 (54:06):
Welcome back to the Morning Spence Sports for Ports, you boy,
Scottie Man giving you the sports report as only I
know how to do. Now, last week it was only
one winner out the bunch, and I made sure I
put them in high regards. Now I'm looking at a
whole list of losers right now. So I'm just gonna
start with the one scored the less points. We're gonna
thought it with the Viking's birth, the Commander.
Speaker 5 (54:30):
You gotta do this right now.
Speaker 3 (54:32):
Today bikeans Bigen's end up being the Commander.
Speaker 4 (54:35):
Thirty one zero I said that again. Thirty one zero.
Speaker 5 (54:40):
J J.
Speaker 3 (54:40):
McCarthy sixteen to twenty three hundred and six two yards
and three touchdowns. Jade and Daniels don't know why he's
still playing for the season went nine of twenty and
seventy eight yards with the interception. Aaron Jones the running
back for the Vikings with fourteen carries seventy six yards.
Jordan Addison and Robertiver went formerception sixty two yards and
tight ends getting to the en zone for the Vikings
(55:02):
Commanders Scary Terry three receptions forty one yards and Chris
Rodriguez Junior ten carries fifty two yards. And the Vikings,
who are on a slide, get off that slide with
beating the Commanders in our scortyen points. Jayden Daniels has
got he just gotta shut it down for the rest
of the year.
Speaker 4 (55:20):
That's just my first opinion on that.
Speaker 3 (55:22):
Are going next, the Ravens lose to the lowly Stealers.
A Ron comes back, a A Ron comes back twenty
two or thirty.
Speaker 4 (55:31):
Four, two hundred and eighty four yards and a touchdowns.
Speaker 3 (55:33):
Lamar Jackson with a rough outing nineteen or thirty five
two nineteen one touchdown winning reception Derrick Henry twenty five carries.
Speaker 4 (55:41):
Ninety four yards.
Speaker 3 (55:43):
DK Metcalf for the Steelers wakes up seven receptions one
hundred and forty eight yards, and he played the little
pump return.
Speaker 4 (55:51):
Zave Flowers eight receptions, one hundred and twenty four yards.
Speaker 3 (55:54):
Ravens get taken down by the n rival Steelers twenty
seven to twenty two.
Speaker 4 (56:01):
Great game right there, all right, last before we get
to the break, Eagles Chargers.
Speaker 1 (56:09):
We're gonna have give.
Speaker 4 (56:11):
Oh yeah, we're gonna do this. We're gonna do this.
Speaker 3 (56:14):
We're gon We're gonna take it nice and slow Eagles Chargers.
Nineteen for the Eagles, twenty two for the Chargers.
Speaker 10 (56:21):
Jalen Hurts a horrible game twenty one forty two hundred
and forty yards with four count them four interceptions.
Speaker 4 (56:33):
Herbert twelve to twenty six, one hundred and thirty nine yards,
who comes down the exception as well as ten carries
and sixty six yards.
Speaker 3 (56:40):
Our aj Brown once again. You know he's a happy man.
Six receptions, one hundred yards. Saint Kwan Barkley finally gets
up off the Matt twenty carries one hundred and twenty
two yards with a touchdown.
Speaker 4 (56:51):
Again, the Super Bowl champs are on a what three
game los? Is that a three game loses street?
Speaker 1 (56:56):
That is tough.
Speaker 4 (56:58):
Geez Louis, and you know it's that time. I gotta
talk about that team.
Speaker 3 (57:08):
Then boys, then boy, then bus then boss them.
Speaker 5 (57:14):
I'm still the boy.
Speaker 4 (57:15):
He's listening.
Speaker 3 (57:16):
It was a rough one down in Detroit, Dallas thick
on the Detroit Lions who came up short.
Speaker 4 (57:21):
Thirty to forty four was a great game. Listen.
Speaker 3 (57:24):
Jamior Gibbs just went absolutely bonkers. Twelve carries, three touchdowns
and forty three yards. Dak Prescott not a bad game,
not his best game. Thirty one to forty seven, three
hundred and seventy six yards with a touchdown.
Speaker 4 (57:37):
Ceedee Lamb again gets off the slide.
Speaker 3 (57:40):
Six reception, one hundred and twenty one yards, one hundred
twenty one one yards, Ryan Florandi nine receptions, one hundred
and fifteen yards in the touchdown uh and Jamo he
had several receptions ninety six yards and Jared Goff twenty
five to thirty four, three hundred and nine yards and
a touchdown.
Speaker 4 (58:00):
Listen, I don't even know what our record is.
Speaker 3 (58:01):
I don't even care about our record, but if they're
pissing me off, because we should have won that game
anyway at that what it's too many interceptions now. Game
of the Week last week was jack State versus Prayer View.
Prayerview took down the Raining swat Champs twenty three to
twenty one. I was in attendance down there in Jackson, Mississipi.
Is an absolutely great game. This week's HSBCU Game of
(58:22):
the Week is the Celebration Bowl taking place in Atlanta, Georgia.
It is South Carolina State Bulldogs versus the Prayer View
A and M Panthers. You can catch that on this
Saturday at I believe it comes on at one o'clock
in the Mercedes Ben Stadium. I will be in attendance
of you in Atlanta, and you see me say, what's up?
Speaker 1 (58:40):
All right?
Speaker 3 (58:41):
Gods?
Speaker 4 (58:41):
What is going on with our teams?
Speaker 1 (58:44):
It?
Speaker 2 (58:46):
I feel like with the Eagles, this has this is
just a long time coming and this is just a
twenty twenty three all over again. I think that the
wheels have fell off and they need to replace our
offensive coordinator of Petulo gotta go.
Speaker 3 (59:03):
I don't think Fortula one throwing the passes though, shitt,
what what are you saying with Jade and Daniels?
Speaker 4 (59:08):
Should he just shut it down?
Speaker 5 (59:10):
And I told you, black brothers, we are kneeling with Kaepernick.
You're not worried about this football season. See, this is
the problem. We always want to do something and we
don't always want to stick to it. Are we kneeling
with the brother because they did the brother wrong? Or
are we gonna just go ahead and get up out
of there. We're just gonna go back and and bow
down to the white man again, because that's what it
seems like everybody's doing. You're doing that. If we're doing that,
(59:32):
then you know what, go command it.
Speaker 1 (59:34):
I bet you.
Speaker 4 (59:35):
I bet you're bowling down last year when y'all was running.
Speaker 5 (59:37):
The table, y'all, I had just heard about the whole
Kaepernick situation this season, So that's started around week four
I started.
Speaker 2 (59:47):
But you know what the crazy thing is is that
this kind of this this argument kind of holds weight
now because Philip Rivers was was just like like brought
brought out from his casket to try out for the Colts.
So I mean, I mean, yup, this argument holds up now.
Speaker 5 (01:00:08):
See brothers. See brothers. We'll see what happened when you
give in. See what happened when you give in.
Speaker 4 (01:00:13):
Man, appreciate you guys for listening in. That was your
sports report with your boy Scotti.
Speaker 3 (01:00:16):
Man, keep listening in the morning experience you know, all day,
every day,