Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
Tired of waking up to boring talk shows, awkward silences,
and commercials that last longer than your rent grace period,
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Yourself up with the Morning Experience on LIT one oh six.
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This Saint your Mama's radio show.
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That's the Morning Experience with me MARKU Slupton, weekday mornings
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oh six.
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You bring the coffee and will bring the chaos. Joe
Rise and Shot DMV. It's your morning voice, Markie Sloter.
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(01:13):
this is the Morning Experience.
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Let's get it.
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Alarm clock ring times a rising right from the city
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On the mic.
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Got the vibe so clean, dropping heat for your hustle
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With Marquis lived in, getting in the mood.
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He's bringing that fire, gotcha energy from the traffic to
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He's the perfect fifth This ain't no.
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Now, how real is that? Talking?
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Real talk with that positive spin starting off strong. So
the DMV wins.
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From uptown the wall, door floor to the bay. Everybody
tuning in to start they day.
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No sleusing, no losing, just vibes in truth.
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Mark we got the keys to the DMV's booth.
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Veiga, Wake up, DMV.
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It's the morning cru.
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Good Marquis looping, getting in the mood.
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He's bringing that fire, got.
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Your energy lit from the traffic to the coffee.
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He's the perfect fitness.
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Yeah, we keep it every God, this.
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Is how the DMV wakes up right with Marquee Sloopton
on the Morning Experience only on that one O six.
Let's make this day legendary. This is the Morning Experience, folks.
(03:07):
Thank you for joining us. Happy Tuesday to you. Whoa
shitz feeling good man?
Speaker 4 (03:15):
I am, now what an intro I'll have what he's happened?
Happy Tuesday.
Speaker 6 (03:21):
That's what I was gonna say. Like those commercials, you
know that shampoo commercial, I'm about to say, yes, give
me some too.
Speaker 3 (03:27):
Oh man, I will tell you this. Your yesterday's show
put a battery in my back.
Speaker 7 (03:32):
So, folks, if you did not listen to yesterday's show,
I implore you to check it out wherever you listen
to your podcast.
Speaker 3 (03:39):
But on this show, on this Tuesday show, we.
Speaker 7 (03:42):
Started off with giving you the Microwave News, giving you
these headlines hot and Ready, and our first story comes
from the Atlanta Black Star and a Tesla supervisor said
only black workers who accept being called the N word
should be higher. And this is what a loss suit
that was filed claimed LESE.
Speaker 6 (04:04):
My thing is we said this before. They don't want
you to come insurgy because they don't want you to
be comfortable. How do they figure this out? What do
they just look up the Coonery chart? Like how do you.
Speaker 4 (04:16):
How was that on the application? You think you made
it all the way through to be like you don't
mind calling us calling you the innword. Now be you
can get hired or you cannot get hired. That is
just wild.
Speaker 3 (04:29):
Yeah it is, yeah, it is.
Speaker 7 (04:31):
Our next story comes from the root and things are
heating up in Texas after Governor Greg Abbott signed and
order banning a historic religion practice for Muslims. A while
of a move to end sharia law isn't getting much
attention in the media, the likely fallout will impact millions
of practice Muslims, many of whom are black, around the country.
Speaker 4 (04:54):
Ships putting a fan a cover over religion. You're starting
because sense of religion. It's going to get wild where
America we have a plethora of different religions, So just
to put the center on that is absolutely wild.
Speaker 6 (05:11):
But isn't it how we got here? That's how we
even came How all the white people came here because
they did they wanted to practice their own religion. Like
this is crazy. This reminds me of Post nine to eleven.
They will have so many legal issues with this. This
is not going anywhere. This guy's in gord.
Speaker 7 (05:26):
Have we said the pilgrims have gotten away from what
they pilgrimaged?
Speaker 3 (05:30):
Here? For that is that is a word? That is
a word.
Speaker 7 (05:35):
And finally, this next story comes from BBC dot com
and the number of people in Japan who are over
the age of one hundred or older had risen to
a record high of one hundred thousand. Japan has the
world's longest life expectancy, and it's known for often being
home to the world's oldest living persons, though some studies
(05:57):
contest the actual number of centurions world wine may be
not true.
Speaker 3 (06:03):
But still a lot of old people living.
Speaker 6 (06:05):
There at least well, in the words of a great
philosopher and poet, Shizzy, get busy. I'll have what they're having. However,
I don't want to get to one hundred. If I
can't function, like just to peck me about it here.
Speaker 4 (06:18):
If I'm not functioning, well that's my thing. I'm like,
all right, living over a hundred is cool there, not here.
Give me a good mid eighties when I'm when I
stopped losing all functions, then it's time for me to go.
And here is not the place to grow super old
like that because you will be forgotten about. Yo.
Speaker 7 (06:37):
I just I cannot imagine being a black person that
is one hundred years old, that was born in nineteen
twenty five to things like move move forward, you know,
and then like move backward in the back end of
my life. I would be like, oh Lord, take me now,
because I know where this is going because I lived
(06:58):
through it. Folks, Tuesday, we got a great show for you.
We have a great topic for you on this Tuesday.
Speaker 3 (07:06):
What is it?
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Stay with us, that's what you call it? Tease, enjoy
this music and join us for topic Tuesday.
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This is the Morning Experience.
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On lit on, I said, this is the Morning Experience
and thank you for joining us on this Tuesday.
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Folks. We're giving you what you need, what you wanted,
and what you did not know existed.
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And if you happen to miss this show or any
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Make sure you check us out Spotify, I art Radio,
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Then also you can join us on Instagram at the
Morning Experience without the gene and experience felt the regular way.
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That's the Morning Experience.
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Join us for all the discourse, and join us for
all the conversation that is happening on Instagram. And for
those older folks that aren't on Instagram, we'll.
Speaker 3 (07:59):
Be on Facebook very very soon.
Speaker 7 (08:01):
And for the younger folks that aren't on Facebook, will
be on TikTok just as soon as well. And for
the black folks that aren't on either and are on
fan base, we will be there as well. Just hold
your horses as we roll this Morning Experience out. But
the best thing that you can do right now is
(08:22):
follow us on Instagram and subscribe to our podcast, So
Ours Our Story Today talks about open Ai talks about
chat GPT specifically, and open ai automatically scans conversations on
chat GPT for harmful or illegal content and may refer
(08:46):
in interactions involving threats of serious violence to law enforcement.
This policy has raised significant private concerns among users. So
basically what this is least is that open ai is
now taking what you say and if it raises enough
red flags, it will report you to the police.
Speaker 4 (09:08):
What.
Speaker 6 (09:10):
Yeah, I don't know why people didn't realize that putting
all this information into this system means that no one
sees it. You didn't read the third party agreement when
you signed up for this, because it's not just you
that can see it. It's not just the police that
actually other people could potentially see this as well, and
they've already had issues with that sharing like whole chats
(09:33):
from people already. So you got to read what you know,
are getting on. And this is very similar to what
social media has as well, like there are limits to
what you can write without it actually not getting out,
just so you know that.
Speaker 4 (09:48):
And this is the times where people are simple enough
to write, well how do I stab my neighbor thirty
times and get away from and just ask the whole
entire question. You put your whole crime out there into
check GBT it hope it answers for you. It again,
you have to read what you're signing up for. There's
a reason why you have a history. It keeps all
(10:09):
of that information. It doesn't just go away. You have
a history that you can go back and check. This
information is out there because you're allowing it to be
out there. So you have to be smarter about what
you're actually asking chat GBT.
Speaker 7 (10:21):
I don't understand why people just didn't assume or think
that this thing wouldn't contact police, Like like, why why
would you think that it would just openly just give
you illegal advice, you know, tell you about illegal activity
without notifying the authorities, you know, Like like I would
I would really like to live in that. Maybe not,
(10:44):
but you know, for hyperbolic reasons, I would really like
to live in that universe where I'm just like, oh, well,
anything that I write in this you know, prompt that
is owned by a billionaire that is being you know,
surveilled by the government, There's nothing that I write in
here that is going to you know, possibly circle back
(11:05):
to me. This is just, you know, this black hole
of information. I would really like to be that naive.
But even in the inception of at least I was like, oh,
this seems like another data gathering apparatus.
Speaker 6 (11:22):
It is, and the actually creator Sam Altman actually said
it on his on a podcast that this is not
They are not legally confidential, so if you put it
in there, they may be liable to share this information.
So I'm not sure if they actually get people sitting
there monitoring it and then sharing it to the police,
or if the police go in and they ask and
(11:43):
they request it, if they have to give that information.
Either way, don't commit crimes in chat GBC. First of all,
CHATGBT be wrong, like y'all gonna be all messed up
before you even start, Like stop, don't do that. If
you find yourself like typing in how to get away
with murder, you need to talk to somebody, like a person, ok, yeah.
Speaker 3 (12:04):
Yeah, yeah, like your local con man. That's what you
gotta do. Go to somebody that has.
Speaker 7 (12:10):
The experience, not some machine that has hypotheticals. We got
we got more life therapeutic advice. On the other side
of this break, this is the morning experience on Tuesday.
This is the morning experience.
Speaker 3 (12:29):
On a Tuesday. Thank you for joining us. Folks.
Speaker 7 (12:32):
We are talking about how chat GPT is dry snitching
on you, Sean dry snitching on you.
Speaker 3 (12:38):
You don't believe me? Check this out.
Speaker 7 (12:41):
No attorney flying privilege open ai ceocm Altman has clarified
that conversations with chat GPT are not protected by legal
confidentiality and could be used as evidence in court if subpoena.
I'm gonna say this is OJ would have been caught.
It would have been signed still delivered because he would
(13:01):
have asked chat GBT, how could I kill Nicolet without
getting caught?
Speaker 4 (13:06):
And you deserve to get caught for asking how to
get how you don't everybody wants everybody to know their plans,
Like I really think that people think that when they
type this this information and it's just going to some
computer that's just answering that nobody has any access to.
It's just like a computer Genie that just answers your
ques nobody can can look into or have access to,
(13:28):
Like these are this The AI is ran by someone
someone asks access to running that. So we have to
understand when we're asking dumb questions like this, I am
happy that they got these horrible people off the streets.
You're asking the wrong questions the chat GPT this.
Speaker 6 (13:45):
But this puts us in a weird situation because a
lot of people have a lot of trust in AI
like this weird amount of reliability and trust on AI,
and we put this out way before we thought this through.
It's the same thing to happen on social media, and
now we're getting to a place where we have this
unregulated machine that's getting or system that's getting more intertwined
(14:08):
in everything that we do. So as we give more information,
the more information the government has access to because they
can share it. So I need people to know because
I saw somebody that was uploading their whole credit report
into Chad GBT and asking Chad GBC like, how do
I take this off my credit?
Speaker 4 (14:25):
Like?
Speaker 6 (14:25):
These are the types of things that we need you guys.
So gen Z, we know that y'all might start a revolution,
we talked about that, but we need you also to
make smarter choices, because that's not smart. People can hack this.
They didn't have access to your information. And yes, if
they are subpoena they will comply with the law, you
best believe it. And every social media platform will do
(14:47):
the same meta all of them.
Speaker 4 (14:50):
This is this last generation of common sense. We have
to help. We have to help. We are the last
generation of common sense.
Speaker 7 (14:57):
This really points out to me, I Sho, is that
you know the villain speech is real. I really didn't
think that, you know, when those villains would have those
soapbox moments and everything I'll tell.
Speaker 3 (15:09):
You my plan and every life like that, that's not real.
Speaker 7 (15:12):
But after seeing this and then also seeing the stories
about people getting caught through chat GPT from telling their
villain is plan. It's like, oh my gosh, that that
villain monologue is true.
Speaker 4 (15:26):
The problem is is that they're doing it before they
commit the crime. It doesn't even make any sense because
now you've done told everybody your plans before you even
committed the crime. So your backward there.
Speaker 6 (15:39):
And I want to make this clear, like they I
don't think they have the monitors that are monitoring everything
you say as you're saying, and so if you type
it in there, it's only if if I'm reading this directly,
and I could be wrong, Marquis. They will only get
this information if they are suboena. Like if somebody says
that there's a crime that has been committed, I need
(15:59):
X y am I. So I just I want to
make that clear as well. Don't still don't commit crimes
and chat. But I'm just saying that's what this is.
Speaker 3 (16:08):
Yeah, yeah, very very true.
Speaker 7 (16:10):
Open AI publishers transparency reports detailing the number of requests
it receives from government agencies for user data.
Speaker 3 (16:19):
These requests typically require.
Speaker 7 (16:21):
A subpoena, court order, or search warrant, depending on the
type of data. Requested, So yes, it has to be requested.
It's not like there's you know, this discord. It's not
like there's this Reddit page that just has oh oh
this is this is Marquise's all of his chat GPT
(16:41):
prompts and everything.
Speaker 3 (16:42):
There's not that.
Speaker 7 (16:44):
But just know that, you know, if if you were
to do a crime, jet GPT is not the first
phrase place that you would want to plan that crime.
Speaker 6 (16:56):
Lease or any embarrassing information like yolla, sham way too much. Yeah,
chat GPT if you itching go to the doctor, like
I need you stop asking chat PPT stop it.
Speaker 7 (17:12):
It's he like chat gpt replacing web md uh instead.
Speaker 4 (17:18):
And we had to know, we we know to stop
checking WebMD because you say you got a headache, and
it would tell you that you've got two days left
to lift, and we knew it was like we gotta
stay away from there. I just had a regular headache.
I just had a long day and didn't drink a
lot of water.
Speaker 7 (17:32):
Yo yo, yes, yes, I told I told WebMD one time,
the bottom of my foot itches, what does that mean?
Speaker 3 (17:41):
And it was like you got diabetes? And I was
like that just seems such such a progression.
Speaker 7 (17:49):
Yeah, oh man, folks, folks, it's Tuesday, giving you more.
Speaker 3 (17:56):
Stay with us, enjoy these tubes. This is one six
and listen the Morning Experience.
Speaker 7 (18:02):
This is the Morning Experience. Thank you for joining us.
So also also want to point out as well are
the inconsistencies in open AI, and critics have pointed out
the contradiction between open AI's privacy justifications in its lawsuit
(18:24):
with The New York Times and its policy of monitoring
and reporting user.
Speaker 3 (18:28):
Chats to the police.
Speaker 7 (18:31):
So I feel as though that there's going to be
this blurred line lease for a while until lawmakers get
on this thing. But I feel like with the lawmakers
that we have, they're not going to get on it.
Speaker 4 (18:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (18:47):
Sure, well they don't even show us their faces apparently.
So are we really at that point where we think
that under this regime it is not an administration anymore,
that they can actually have people that are in positions
of power. They're getting rid of people for saying stuff
about Charlie like people are getting kicked out for much
(19:07):
much less. We don't have the people in power in
order to monitor this. We do not have the people
in place in order to stop this. And then Congress
is not doing anything but sitting on their hands. So
it's never going to make his way to the Senate. Yeah,
we don't have the capability to do anything about this
or any type of regulation over this whatsoever. So I'm
(19:29):
afraid of where this goes because it's expanding every day.
And we tell you here about Palenteer.
Speaker 4 (19:37):
So did the people who's typing this stuff in there,
did they not watch like forensic files going to sleep
or anything like that, where this information is always what
gets people caught up. You typing that info in there. Again,
you have to read what you're getting yourself into a
lot of this stuff, a lot of these things before
where it was like your pictures that you're posting up
everything about you and your pictures are being used. You're
(20:00):
signing up for this. It's it's the fine print that
we don't do Again, we are the just to okay,
what's this belt and sign off on it. We are
we are a society of those kind of people. So
we have to understand that everything we do is being
tracked monitored. No matter what you think or how how
less you think it's going, it's happening. It is happening.
Speaker 7 (20:21):
And y'all both really just said the same thing. And
and and we are going to uncover what volunteer is
because shiz that that that is exactly that is exactly
what volunteer is. That is exactly what it does. If
you have not heard about it, beloved, I'm glad because
(20:41):
we are about to blow the top off.
Speaker 3 (20:44):
This is the morning experience.
Speaker 7 (20:46):
Stay with us, as our old heads from gen X
will say on some real issh Son, stay with us.
Speaker 3 (20:54):
This is the morning experience. On this is the morning experience. Yes, yes, yes,
you get it, you get it. Let's get to what
we talked about.
Speaker 7 (21:05):
Pallaunteer Technologies now Polunteer's main software platforms.
Speaker 3 (21:09):
This is pollunteer. Got them on.
Speaker 7 (21:11):
This platform is used by defense, intelligence, and law enforcement
agencies to identify patterns in vast data sets, including intelligent
reports and confidential information. Originally developed for counter terrorism, it
is now used by US intelligence agencies, the Department of Defense,
and allied nations for tasks ranging from predicting terrorist attacks
(21:35):
to planning military missions. And this is both foreign and
keyword domestic. So now we have a system that is
monitoring us domestically least.
Speaker 6 (21:50):
And the funny part is the Republican Party was saying,
I don't want to be on a list. The Democrats
are going to put me on a list, when in
actuality it was always the GOP, the Republicans, we're gonna
put you on our list. And the people you should
worry about if you like the Second Amendment definitely the
people who are currently in power, because in order for
(22:10):
you to be able to take over or to have
like a militia, you need a gun in order for
you to I mean think about it. But this is
a scary thing. If you've not read up about Palenteer
and Peter Teal and what he wants to do, read
Accelerationism is Peter Teal. So if you don't know what
(22:31):
that is and Charge and Yarvin, please look them up
because it is quite scary. And they're the ones that
put jd Vance into place, and that is how he
got where he is. So look that up.
Speaker 4 (22:43):
We're in we're in scary hours. Of what you say,
and you will be used against you no matter where
you say that. We are in scary times. And and
just to think like you said, those are the people
that put uh jd Vant in power, it's it's it's
just uh, that's the vice in the United States. That's
that's the vice president of the United States. Just sit
(23:05):
on that for a little bit.
Speaker 7 (23:06):
And folks like this, this is a continuous slippery slope.
And if we don't take to the streets like the
new Paulice, did you know, we we can find ourselves
in a very very unique situation because you don't see
other nations reeling back, uh, these security measures like this
(23:30):
to have this level of surveillance. I come from Lancaster, Pennsylvania,
which is the still to this day, uh, the most
heavily surveilled city in the country.
Speaker 3 (23:44):
Like there's literally a.
Speaker 7 (23:46):
Camera, a working camera on every single street corner. And
I felt as though that they did that to normalize it.
Twenty years later, it's normal now and it shouldn't be
that level of surveillance. So again, count on your Morning
(24:06):
team to roll out these details and to give you
this information. It is up to you to do what
you will with this information. This is the Morning experience
on lit I, this is the Morning Experience. Thank you
for joining us on this new hour.
Speaker 3 (24:27):
SiZ.
Speaker 7 (24:28):
I feel like we are properly letting people know, like
whether it's chat GBT, whether it's deep sea, whether it's copilot,
we're letting folks know that, Like, yo, don't just let
your whole soul out, man.
Speaker 4 (24:43):
I fear the people that we're talking to. We're talking
to the people that do this stuff on camera or
do or commit a crime or anything like that and
then brag about it on camera and give details about
everything you're doing the police work for the police. So
I know it's an invasion, well not a necessarily a
(25:04):
vasion of privacy, but I know it's a you're putting
stuff in there and you're you're hoping that nobody is
being able to read what you wrote. But it's a
it's it's ai powered by someone someone someone has access
to that someone has control, but that someone programmed it.
Speaker 6 (25:19):
For sure, somebody definitely programmed it. Watch what you do.
But you know what, I'm kind of like like jumping
subjects really quick. One of the things that I actually
saw because I was just thinking about control and power,
was I don't know if you guys got a chance
to watch it, because I'm old. I almost didn't stay
up to watch the Netflix canelo versus Crawford. I was
(25:41):
really shocked by how many people didn't think that Bud
could pull this off. And I was like, is there
a tinge of something there that there was so many people? Well,
I don't know, Canelo is that dude? Like, let me
not do that. Canelo is that dude? So as a
person who has been I'm not a boxer, but I
do like a lot in the boxing classes and training
(26:01):
and stuff like that.
Speaker 4 (26:02):
And like my day.
Speaker 6 (26:07):
Into it I've been in. Do y'all think that that's
what that was? Do you think it was a tinge
of racism?
Speaker 3 (26:13):
Absolutely?
Speaker 7 (26:14):
Absolutely, absolutely, Just like there was a tinge of racism
when Mayweather went up against Connor McGregor. And it's just
like y'all realize that, like Mayweather has been doing this
forever and Condor McGregor.
Speaker 3 (26:30):
Is just jumping into this.
Speaker 7 (26:31):
There's there's there's no way that Connor McGregor has any chance.
Speaker 3 (26:35):
But folks would let racism play hard.
Speaker 7 (26:38):
Oh Connor McGregor, he's bigger, he's he's faster in m
m a you know, and.
Speaker 3 (26:43):
And and that that's what this is.
Speaker 7 (26:45):
Never mind the fact that Bud Crawford never lost the fight,
never lost a fight, never never you know, she's what
you think.
Speaker 4 (26:57):
It's definitely there. Do you can tell that just from
the pay disparity. I think Crawford made Yellow had one
hundred to one hundred and fifty million. And it was
like he Crawford went out there. He went out there
and fought for the opportunity, like the same thing he
did against Spence. He said, y'all, don't believe in me,
but what I'm going to show you is what I'm
going to show you. And he proved it. Shout out
(27:18):
the bud, shout out his head off. I know we
got off the main subject, but he boxed Canelo's head off.
That was that was excellent, excellent, excellent demonstration of what
they call the sweet science.
Speaker 7 (27:32):
He put y'all yo, he put together a display like
that that was a master class in boxing. And and
for Canelo, I you know, I think that he missed
a moment.
Speaker 3 (27:48):
He missed a moment, especially.
Speaker 7 (27:49):
With the temperature towards you know, the Mexicans and Mexican
Americans and everything.
Speaker 3 (27:55):
I feel like he missed a moment during the fight.
Speaker 7 (28:00):
But hey, you know what hashtag black lives matter, vote
on black, bet on black.
Speaker 6 (28:05):
It was from Desperado. I liked it. He was the weapon.
Shout out to him and he's a switcher in the ring.
He's South Paul Like, I don't know how people actually
went against him, but you know it is what it is,
black excellence.
Speaker 3 (28:23):
Yeah, yeah, I mean we're we're we are.
Speaker 7 (28:26):
Constantly, constantly, constantly finding finding spaces.
Speaker 3 (28:30):
To prove ourselves.
Speaker 7 (28:32):
And you know, we have to be like a shack
after and after the end of all of these.
Speaker 3 (28:39):
We have to have shack energy and be like, tell
me how my ass tastes and just leave it. Leave
it like that, folks, we got more ass for you
to taste. I'm just playing. We got got some more
topics for you have and experience.
Speaker 7 (28:57):
Oh, we got opp coming because.
Speaker 6 (29:05):
In case you forgot, you are tuned into the morning
experience giving you a whole lot of tea in the cup. Yes,
I know it should be coffee, but here we serve
tea and it is super hot. And yes, I'm your girl,
Lise Winnie and I'm here for another installment of Yes
hypocritical central of opp and of the Nazi by the
nature said, are you down with OPP I hope you are,
(29:26):
because baby, we got a lot today and we're serving
it hot. So here we go. So we got three
wild stories. We got a church controversy over a hug,
a door desk driver losing her job, and some relationship
all out. So hang in with me. Let's start with
the pastor's wife. All right, Yes, not Whitney, but we
got the pastor's wife on the line.
Speaker 3 (29:45):
So a choir.
Speaker 6 (29:46):
Member got kicked out of church because she didn't hug
the pastor's wife. Yes, you heard me right, And just
take a look at this, and then we will talk.
A lit sent to this and we will talk one
instance time.
Speaker 3 (30:12):
I'm gonna.
Speaker 8 (30:14):
Amen, God is such a good God him to be.
He's a shield in the middle of the wild evn.
He's everything that we need him to be. He's a
million of him, you know, a lot. But I gotta
make a correction off this morning, a man. I am
so sorry, a man, but I want to make a
correction on this morning. I was speaking with Mahogany on
(30:37):
this morning, and Mahogany kind of gave me a different
hus than she normally does.
Speaker 3 (30:41):
The man, you know what, We're not gonna have that
in the body of Chris.
Speaker 8 (30:46):
The word of God tells us that open ree.
Speaker 9 (30:54):
So she goes on to continue to break mahogany for
a another what five to ten minutes, and Mahogany just
stands there.
Speaker 6 (31:07):
The question I have for other people's problems. One is
this appropriate for a pastor or pastor's wife to bury
people in front of the congregation? And two is this
why people no longer come in to church sheds?
Speaker 4 (31:26):
I was, I was thinking it, and then I happened
to look at the comments, and the comment said it.
This is why people don't come, she said. And then
she didn't even say she didn't hug her, She didn't
hug her the way she normally hugs her. This is
you are abusing your power. We talk about Trump going
in here and just abusing some power. This lady is
a Trumper the way she is going about it. Because
(31:48):
this is unnecessary just to be rate her about a
half hug or somewhat of a hug. God, listen, I'm
here to get the word not to be your friend.
Speaker 7 (31:58):
Thanks, I'm gonna say something and and and I hope
that it doesn't offend you, lease, and I hope that
it doesn't offend the FCC or or are women viewers.
But uh, this lady must have some big titties.
Speaker 3 (32:14):
Uh that that that is.
Speaker 7 (32:16):
She didn't hugger like she used to hugger like like
there's a church hug. There's there's a difference. There's a difference.
And when that church hug doesn't happen, you know, some
people are like, you, Jessebel, what is going on that
you are not giving me the church hug with the
six inches in between for enough room for the holy ghost.
So I'm thinking that she's like, that's what it is,
(32:39):
and you know she's after my husband.
Speaker 6 (32:42):
I think this is exactly why millennials are less religious
and gen z or less religious, because we are seeing
more and more stories like this coming out where passes,
they asking for planes, they asking for money, donations, they're
cussing people out. Like it's getting to the point where
we starting to see that the church may not be
(33:02):
in the church with the people, like Jesus has left
the room. And with that, I want you to stay
here and I want you to congregate with me. Yes
you hear me. I want the church to say, hey, man,
you're gonna get this music right here from the Church
of Latto or whomever is coming on these airways. Stay
right here, welcome back to the morning experience. Yes, serving
(33:25):
you all of the sea for your morning breakfast. And
we were just talking about some church. But today we're
gonna flip over to the workplace because there's some drama
on TikTok about a door dash driver who actually got
fired from her job. So here's what we got. We
have a DoorDash driver who is pregnant and she had
a one year old with her in the car. She
(33:48):
lost her job while she was delivering to a doctor's office,
so she dropped the food off to a nurse. As
soon as the food got into the hands of the
receptionist that she got an alert that said that the
person she dropped it off to did not receive the food.
So she goes back into the office to confront the
(34:09):
woman because the door dash decided that they were going
to ban her from being able to deliver because the
client said she didn't get her food. A whole argument ensued,
where eventually the receptionist goes to get the doctor that
owns the practice, who then proceeds to tell her that
she did not get her food. They go back and forth.
(34:32):
She eventually says she did get the food and she
would rectify the situation, but she needs to be quiet
about it, like, don't be loud, mind you. This is
a white woman talking to a black woman about her tone.
Do you think that the DoorDash driver was wrong for
going back into this place of business that has patients
in there to confront this woman? Or is the doctor
(34:56):
wrong for tone police? And of course she's wrong because
she told them she didn't get her food. Tone and
also tone policing this situation. What are your thoughts? Sheiz?
Would you be this calm? Would you be calm?
Speaker 4 (35:07):
Now? I have to ask. I didn't see the video.
We say she went in there and confronted her. Was
it the hey what happened? Or was it the hand
up confront her? What happened? Because was it a im
mediatem file off to handle? How did this work out?
I'm sorry, I didn't see the video.
Speaker 6 (35:24):
So she was somewhat calm in the beginning when she
was talking to the receptionists that gave her food, and
as they are not giving her answers, she does proceed
to get.
Speaker 4 (35:33):
Louder as you should. As you should, so I'm on
her side. I'm on her side. Go in there and
see what's up. I know I came in here listen.
Times is rough because not only am I doing this
while I'm pregnant, I also have a one year old
with me, So clearly it's not Everything ain't working out
like it's supposed to where it's babysitters and all this.
I need this to happen. So for you to just
(35:55):
say that I don't get out, I didn't deliver your
food when we both know that I just came in
here where it has to be cameras or something around,
because you are not going to draw on.
Speaker 7 (36:05):
Me like this, Marky, you going in there, Yes, yes,
I'm going in there.
Speaker 3 (36:11):
Tone policing is.
Speaker 7 (36:13):
Is never good and and honestly this is this is
what you get from a lot of white liberals.
Speaker 3 (36:23):
You get you get this tone policing like.
Speaker 7 (36:26):
Oh, you don't need to talk to us like that,
Oh you don't need to present your stuff yourself like that.
You know this, this policing not not realizing that.
Speaker 3 (36:39):
Like ma'am, sir, sir, ma'am madam sir.
Speaker 7 (36:45):
This this goes beyond whatever your political beliefs are. I
don't know what your political beliefs are. I know that
I'm having a beef with a white woman and and
vice versa. Uh So, I'm going to give you the
same energy that I feel as though that I'm being
confronted with a caring and the fact that you know,
(37:08):
this doctor again don't know her political beliefs, but the
fact that she can't internalize that just you know, shows
me her standpoint and viewpoint of she does not care
of the situation and viewpoint of this woman in front
of her.
Speaker 3 (37:25):
And that's a problem for sure.
Speaker 6 (37:27):
And I don't know the rules of door dash. I
don't know if one person doesn't get their food, if
they automatically will suspend you from actually delivering, or if
this is a history, like is this because I don't know,
y'all gotta let me know, and like, let me know
if they just block you, if one person don't get
their food, because to me, I don't know, but I
(37:48):
definitely would go back in there. I would do the
same thing this woman did. She absolutely I think was
in her rights because you what you're not going to
do is play with my time and my money.
Speaker 4 (37:58):
Yep, while my bib one year old at when it's happened.
Speaker 6 (38:02):
In the Unfortunately she was in the car.
Speaker 4 (38:04):
I was gonna say, they going, you know, they're gonna listen.
They gonna spin this anyway.
Speaker 6 (38:07):
But unfortunately, the baby was in the car, and you
can't leave your baby in the car. And if you're
listening to this in the car, don't leave y'all baby
in the car. But I want you to sit right
here and listen to this music right here on Live
one o six. Welcome back to the morning experience, right
here on Lets one o six. And we have yet
(38:28):
another story of opp Yes, another installment with me yo
girl at least winny. And finally we got some revenge. Yes,
we have a relationship story. So in this story, what
we have is a man who had a girlfriend who
has a pretty awkward situation. So he has a woman
(38:48):
who he claims has bo. He confronted her about this
intimate bo in text form. Mind you, she sees it
because it shows rad she never responds to it. She
decides to take her anger to Twitter. She makes a
post about him, posts a fake picture of a man's
(39:12):
private area that is small, and she says that this
small man you get the word, is trying to play
with me. He then texts her and asks her to
delete it. She doesn't, so he claps back with a
photo by inserting another picture of her and him in
an intimate situation. She is in a very compromising situation
(39:34):
where you can see her face, so that he can
show people that that picture that she posted is not him.
And now she texts him to take it down, and
she says that my family can see this. Please take
this down. So she deletes the post, but he makes
his own posts and she said, if you do not
remove your post, I am going to get you on
(39:56):
revenge horn. And she begs him to take it down
and he refuses unless she issues a public apology. Some
say he went too far. Others are saying he was
just matching her energy. What say you, shiz, is he
wrong for not taking this down? Would you do the same.
Speaker 4 (40:17):
When they go low, we go to hell. We go
a lot lower than they do. Listen, I'm I'm I love,
I love a good petty. Nothing makes my day better
than a little bit of petty. And that though it is,
though it is illegal, that is revenge born. That is
(40:38):
exactly what that is. But listen, I'll take it down.
It's out there already now, so down, no problem. I'll
take it down.
Speaker 3 (40:46):
Is that, Uh, don't don't dish it out. If he
can't take it simply please, I.
Speaker 6 (40:56):
Will say that he definitely shouldn't have done that, because, again,
like she has said, this is illegal. However, I will
also say that hers also plays into this. And when
we come back on the other side of this break,
I want you to tell me. Was he wrong to
approach her in a text message? Should this have been
done in person? If you can't stand the older, should
(41:16):
you be talking to this person in person? Get this music,
will be right here, stay right there on lit one
O six. Welcome back to lit one O six. Yes,
you're right here in the morning experience with me Lise
Winnie Marquis Lufton and should he get busy? And we
are in the throes of other people's problems and we
are talking about if your boob maybe booty stink, like,
(41:39):
do you tell them to their face, hey babe, you
smelling a little wonky? Or should you text it? Because
in this situation, a man texts a woman that he
does not like her bo and he's mentioned it to
her allegedly that's what he's saying, and she didn't do
anything about it, and that's how we got here. She
is are you telling people like what you're doing?
Speaker 4 (42:00):
Uh, what is their history of violence? Because I want
to that if I tell you this in person, I
don't want to have to duck, I don't have to
bob and weave. I just want to make sure that
I can tell you this. We have to know their
history because that is that is the absolute sucker way
in the long run, that's the sucker way to go
(42:21):
about saying that. But listen, if I know you're going
to put hands upside my head when I say that,
I think text is the best way.
Speaker 6 (42:28):
I don't think people should be able to have these conversations.
Marque's like, should we be able to tell our partners
because like that could be a lot of different things
if you're smelling something.
Speaker 7 (42:36):
Yes, yes, yes we should be able to have these conversations.
But I can imagine that the kind of a conversation
he had with himself to tell her this, whether it
was you know, to be like, all right, can I
tell her to their face? Should I tell her text?
(42:57):
Should I not tell her? You know, that's a whole
mind body exercise within itself that he landed on texting,
because that's probably the communication that they did. So he
landed on the communication. You know that they did, even though.
Speaker 3 (43:12):
I agree that's a face conversation.
Speaker 6 (43:16):
No, they were dating.
Speaker 4 (43:18):
No, they were, Oh my man, you did. He was
just being petty at this point, he was He kept
going over and over again, you kept going back to
the well, now it's a problem.
Speaker 7 (43:28):
Then I think that now I think that he likes her,
and and and that he was incredibly hurt. He told
her about this stank, you know, and that that was
the only thing told her about the stank.
Speaker 3 (43:39):
Boom we get ready to stank. You could be my wife,
But there's the stank.
Speaker 7 (43:43):
And and and she she she took it the wrong
way into the public.
Speaker 3 (43:47):
And he was like, you know what, now, if I
got to go to hell.
Speaker 6 (43:50):
I mean, would you be like if your significant your
spouse came do you say, baby, you smell a little right?
You wouldn't you be offended? Like you you're smelling right?
Speaker 7 (44:00):
No, my my, my wife has told me plenty of times, babe,
your feet stink. And you know what, I got it handled.
And there's been times that I told her that her
breath was a little off.
Speaker 4 (44:13):
And you know, you did not get it handled because
she keeps telling you, you said, she keeps telling you
didn't get it handled.
Speaker 6 (44:22):
Narrative, He trying to change the narrative.
Speaker 7 (44:26):
Wait, we gotta bring it on, we gotta bring her on.
I will defend this until I am blue red. However,
in the face, I took care of my stinky feet,
my shoes.
Speaker 3 (44:41):
It was though.
Speaker 6 (44:44):
And with that we will have some amazing music and
we will also have some commercials, preferably with some type
of soap. So make sure you're right here on experience, folks.
Speaker 3 (44:56):
Thank you for joining us this Tuesday.
Speaker 6 (44:59):
Least go Ravens, Go Ravens, and we learned a lot. Kids.
Make sure you wash your body, including.
Speaker 4 (45:10):
With an emphasis on foot care. It is an amazing Tuesday.
Enjoy it, y'all.
Speaker 3 (45:20):
Let's a like shine in America. Don't let them shame
Speaker 7 (45:25):
You or your feet.