All Episodes

June 12, 2025 β€’ 180 mins
Welcome back to The Network β€” the rawest roundtable in the game, hosted by media mogul Stackpack. This episode dives into a heated and unapologetically real conversation straight from the audio streets of Clubhouse. Stack and his crew tackle the controversial question: β€œDo Black men make your city look bad?” From cultural perception to community influence, nothing is off limits. Expect powerful opinions, sharp rebuttals, wild moments, and a few laughs along the way. This isn't just talk β€” it's reflection, growth, and a reminder that Black voices deserve space in every room. Tap in, turn it up, and join The Network where every topic gets the unfiltered treatment. Listen. Think. Debate. Repeat.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-network-podcast--5862733/support.

πŸŽ™οΈ The Network Podcast with Stack Pack πŸ”₯ Raw. Real. Viral. Culture.
Stay tapped in with #PackGang and get the latest updates, episodes, and exclusives at: πŸ‘‰

https://stackpackmedia.blogspot.com/?m=1

πŸš€ If you want to connect with me directly, talk social media, cryptocurrency, podcast opportunities, paid slots on The Network, or just link up β€” hit me up. Text me right now at txt.com/Stackpack
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
What the helly that called me daddy?

Speaker 2 (00:03):
Y'oll and y'all we're gonna, we're gonna, we're gonna turn
up over here.

Speaker 3 (00:08):
Y'all know what it is. Let's go out to helly
beyond man that rick Let's go out.

Speaker 4 (00:13):
Heard.

Speaker 1 (00:13):
I'm fuckus? This got this nigga lyric? What the helly
n'ma's gonna baghetti?

Speaker 5 (00:17):
Manh'll get that bacon president niggas on baghetti?

Speaker 1 (00:21):
What the hell? I don't know, No Jackson, I know,
Ben Frankie, what the hell gotta take my pills? I
had two cranky? What the hell? And the ask God
and the s eighty? What the hell?

Speaker 5 (00:30):
How you going on drugs? And Ima steel naked? What
the hell centers?

Speaker 6 (00:33):
Because the hell.

Speaker 7 (00:34):
Bigga, come pad?

Speaker 1 (00:35):
What the hell? How that brought his life? If us
gonna take it? What the hell? This a noose of valves?
This with a basic What the hell?

Speaker 8 (00:41):
What's on?

Speaker 1 (00:42):
Ricket? Fluff sip the seat bacon?

Speaker 5 (00:44):
What the hell I'm not keeping it?

Speaker 1 (00:45):
Cal get the trap shaking? What the hell like a
dad beat? The imas say, naked?

Speaker 7 (00:49):
What the hell, what the hell, what the hell, what
the helly, what the hell, what the hell, what the
helly what the.

Speaker 9 (01:01):
What the hell?

Speaker 7 (01:03):
What the hell?

Speaker 1 (01:05):
What the helly barrier?

Speaker 10 (01:07):
What the hell?

Speaker 5 (01:08):
What the helly Bryan Dames with the helly.

Speaker 2 (01:11):
Cyrus, Yo, We're gonna have a good ass conversation today.
I ain't playing none of the troll ship, none of
the weird shit we're gonna go in today. Do different
cities make Black men look bad? I had this in
my mind for a very very very long ass time,

(01:34):
and I can't wait to talk about this ship with
you guys. But I had this ship, like im planting
it in my mind for a long time because I've
seen different cities make us look very, very very bad.

Speaker 3 (01:47):
Right.

Speaker 2 (01:47):
I said, it's it's crazy, It's it was you know.
Me and me and wifey Amanda was definitely talking about
this ship. We was like, Yo, I was like, bro,
I had to do this ship. I had to. I said,
you know what, I'm gonna do this shit asap because
I was thinking about this ship.

Speaker 3 (02:04):
I was sitting on it.

Speaker 2 (02:05):
I was like, Yo, I'm gonna sit on this ship
for a long time and I finally gonna pop out
with this ship. This is the topic right here. Do
different cities make Black men look bad?

Speaker 3 (02:14):
This is shit.

Speaker 2 (02:14):
I want to get into this, This shit I want
to talk about today.

Speaker 9 (02:18):
You dig.

Speaker 2 (02:20):
Shout us to Rosie. Shout outs to white ya man
the Shotusta Martine shot, said doctor. Shout us to Quig.
Shouts everybody that's coming over from the last room too.
Because I'm gonna type in, I'm gonna.

Speaker 3 (02:29):
Go fucking nuts in this room. I want to talk
about this.

Speaker 2 (02:32):
Let's wait for everybody to fucking come through right now.
This is what I'm waiting for everybody to come through, Rosie.
What's going on? They transitioning? Are they coming over? Talk
to me because this is gonna be a good ass topic.
I got a lot to talk about on this one.
Wait for more people to come and while y'all waiting,
paying the room up and share the room up to Yeah,
he transitioned in the room over, So they coming over, Rosie,

(02:58):
how you feel about this? How about like the different cities?
Real quick while they come out? Do you feel like
they make the black man look bad? Taping with me
real quick before I get into this shit, because you know,
soon as they car coming nova, it's gonna be crazy.

Speaker 11 (03:13):
I mean I feel like it's I guess it kind
of depends on where you are. I don't think that
every city does, but I think based off of where
you are in the demographics where you are, it could
that can happen, you know. I mean if you're in
predominantly white places like my brother, where my brother is, like,

(03:40):
he has to be very careful what he does and
how he moves where he is because he lives in
an all white county and he's like one of just
a handful of black men out there. So I just
think it's based off of where you are, honestly.

Speaker 2 (03:58):
So you're telling me it's low, it's where you are.
It depends on the location. That's what I want to
talk about.

Speaker 12 (04:04):
The look.

Speaker 2 (04:04):
That's what I was thinking about. It is depends on
where you are. Where are you, like, what part.

Speaker 13 (04:11):
Of the city you're in.

Speaker 2 (04:11):
Because every time my head this shit from black women,
black ladies and black shit, I always hear it's like
shitty ass experiences in different places. This is why I
wanted to talk about this today. In different cities, if
you do get different experiences all the time. So I
wanted to wake it up and talk about this, but
Rosie said it right there. It depends on where you are.
Who you're surrounding yourself with, who's tapping, and who you like,

(04:35):
your environments, everything you surround yourself with shitty individuals, you
will be the next shitty black man coming from that city.
But if you have got some morals, character values, all
of that good shit, that ain't never going to diminish
who you are, right, It's different, right, And then I
was I was talking to Wifey too. She was like, Yo,
in the city of Boston, the men here, right, Rosie,

(04:59):
they are very kind right in my city personally, Like
I'm gonna tell y'all personally where I'm from, they are
kind here. And every time we hear different shares from
you know, black individuals or it just different people in general,
it will be shitty experiences and shitty things that they've
been been just you.

Speaker 9 (05:18):
Know what I mean, shitty shit.

Speaker 2 (05:19):
And I'm like, dann, y'all don't have good experiences with
black people. Why it always got to be you know,
this shit or why gotta be you know what I mean?
Like and always some shitty as shit. So I'm always really,
really really really trying to figure out, like, is it
the place you are, is it the people you surrounding
yourself with is it you know, did you not have
a good dad, did you not have people that you know, believed.

Speaker 14 (05:40):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (05:41):
It's just always some shitty experience. And I'm really trying
to figure out is it the different cities?

Speaker 3 (05:45):
Is it your area? Is it that?

Speaker 2 (05:48):
Because when wife he was talking about this shit Corey,
she was like, Bro, they are kind in different cities.
Why are they always having these experiences on clubhouse? So
I want to talk about this shit today, Corey. I
don't know if you want to open up for us,
but Bros, it definitely depends on the city.

Speaker 3 (06:03):
I go to a different city, all the black people nice.

Speaker 2 (06:05):
Probably they they're welcoming, you know, they're trying to you know, network,
And then you go to other cities, Yay and Rosie
and everybody, and it's very hostile. You'll catch yourself having
to look over your shoulder or you know what I'm saying.
I don't like that feeling. Oh yeah, you know what
I'm saying.

Speaker 3 (06:21):
It's just this.

Speaker 2 (06:22):
Feeling that black people have when they go to different cities. Now, yeah,
tell me if I'm wrong, Rosie, telling me if I'm wrong.
I've seen this multiple times in different cities where they
have bad experiences. But then when you go to other experiences,
you guys are having these nice ass experiences with different
people because it was the shitty city you was in.
Maybe it was just the town you was in at

(06:43):
that time. Maybe you know what I'm saying, Like, was
it the city you was in?

Speaker 9 (06:47):
Like?

Speaker 1 (06:47):
What hap like?

Speaker 2 (06:49):
You know I'm saying, get out to say. That's why
I tell y'all to travel all the time. Get out
of where you are. If you, guys, get out of
where you are, you'll realize that there's more to life
than then what you're just sitting on.

Speaker 3 (06:58):
You just sitting around for no reason. Don't sit around
in the city, bro, get out the city.

Speaker 2 (07:04):
As soon as you get out the city, you'll realize
that there's more to life, more to life, more different people,
more different experiences. Stop being you know what I'm saying,
And especially if you just did and that's just the
only shit, you know? You know what I'm saying, Man,
I want to keep this floor open. I want to
talk to you guys. Yeah, how are you feeling about this?

Speaker 13 (07:19):
Bro?

Speaker 2 (07:19):
How are you feeling about this? When I talked to
you about this last night? Different cities do it make
us look bad?

Speaker 9 (07:24):
Kay?

Speaker 2 (07:24):
Welcome to the stage, Rosie. Our brother Albert just came
to the stage. How y'all feeling about this? Do you
feel like different cities make us look bad?

Speaker 9 (07:32):
I'm sorry, Albora, goddamn it.

Speaker 15 (07:34):
I think somebody's beating me too modern you and I
end up throwing you back down. I'm trying to I'm
gonna pull them up and then somebody can mood of this.

Speaker 16 (07:43):
I already did it.

Speaker 9 (07:43):
Bro, you're doing a lot. Yeah, yeah, I'm doing I'm
help him. What the hell wrong with you? A supposed
to help? Pull himack and pull them back up, bro,
pull them back up. I'm supposed to help. Hello, Okay,
So dude, would you say go ahead? Back up? Yeah?

(08:05):
Could you're pulling them back up?

Speaker 17 (08:06):
Yeah?

Speaker 9 (08:06):
I'm sorry, I'm doctor.

Speaker 15 (08:07):
I was trying to help my bro, but nobody never
appreciates anything. Always one of those black guys in those city.
I guess, so do different cities black men looks bad?
We need statistics, you know.

Speaker 9 (08:22):
I was supposed to go do some things to get
all this information together. What cities in particular do you
think make black men look bad?

Speaker 11 (08:33):
This is Chicago, poor onesgo Why did you automatically Chicago
ones the poor city make them look bad?

Speaker 2 (08:44):
Bro Way, why did you say Chicago? Why'd you automatically
say that? Can y'all please tell me why he said automatically?

Speaker 14 (08:52):
Don't you mean Syra or town there?

Speaker 9 (08:57):
Yeah, shy Iraq?

Speaker 13 (09:00):
Come on, now, y'all have in mind.

Speaker 3 (09:08):
That's just the first city that comes to mind.

Speaker 9 (09:10):
Is Well, everyone talks about is Shiraq.

Speaker 15 (09:12):
I don't know, because they have a port over there
while they want to sit there and you know what
you call that, uh the word when they start moving
other people into the neighborhood regentification over.

Speaker 8 (09:25):
I don't know that.

Speaker 9 (09:25):
That's why.

Speaker 15 (09:26):
I don't know why they always talk about Hiraq. But
they always talk about Shirak and they have a lot
of murderers. How people are poor is the big class
over there of black people that just are not motivated
to work. I hear about this about Chirac all the time,
more than I hear about any other city.

Speaker 18 (09:45):
So I'll say, okay about.

Speaker 19 (09:50):
I say this about town because you're talking about so
I just I just I just I just stopped talking
to someone from Chicago now because he was isn't a
great guy but because we just didn't align on some things.

Speaker 18 (10:04):
But he was a great guy. So I don't know.
That was my one experience.

Speaker 19 (10:08):
I have heard other women date man from Chicago that
that seem cool. I want that wouldn't have been like
the first That wouldn't have been the first city that
I'd have named that make black men look bad if
I'm being honest. So I don't I don't know.

Speaker 14 (10:26):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (10:27):
So cities, what those cities do you have in mind?
Because I just heard Shyrack off rip. That's like the
first town y'all pointed out, which just Shyrack. Is there
any other? Like what's going on? That's just like the
first thing that pings in.

Speaker 18 (10:40):
I don't know.

Speaker 19 (10:40):
I think obviously it's going to be based on like
my experience, and I travel a lot, but I'm not
traveling and engaging and having conversations with men to like,
you know, pursue that you know what I mean like that,
but based on what I've seen and based on like
you know, the cities in which I've done like events and.

Speaker 18 (11:00):
Workshops and stuff.

Speaker 19 (11:03):
I say, like Atlanta, I say, like Los Angeles, I
even say, and forgive me, fellow New Yorkers. I love y'all,
but some of our men be doing the absolute least.
So yeah, if I had to, if I had to

(11:24):
off top think of I think mostly like the entertainment cities,
the cities where the men have access to to to
all the things and have low Yeah.

Speaker 18 (11:37):
Detroit is another one of those things. One of those cities. Yeah,
I had Detroit too.

Speaker 19 (11:45):
I would say, the cities where men have a lot
of access to like women and like certain lifestyles, because
you get to see how weak some of these men
really are.

Speaker 18 (11:55):
So that's what I'm gon say.

Speaker 3 (11:58):
Travel.

Speaker 2 (11:58):
That's why I said, when y'all get out out of
your out of your city, you'll start to see ship
like different ship like damn this it's not all what
is cracked up to be or damn or or my city.
They treat me different, right, That's what I was hearing.
That's what I was seeing. It was just different people
getting treated differently in different cities.

Speaker 3 (12:15):
What's up?

Speaker 20 (12:15):
Yeah?

Speaker 19 (12:18):
But yay, Sorry, you know I be dialogueing with you.
Don't be asking all sensitive and stuff. Come off your
damn mike.

Speaker 9 (12:26):
Me.

Speaker 18 (12:28):
Yes, you see you gone too far now.

Speaker 15 (12:35):
Gotten to blood clot all right, I'm sorry. Okay, listen,
just I was pinging up. I was trying to ping up.
I want to get this woman lit. I want everybody
to help me ping up, get this woman lit. I
think it's a good conversation to me, my team we try.

Speaker 9 (12:47):
To put on you know what I mean?

Speaker 21 (12:49):
And uh, let's take this.

Speaker 9 (12:50):
So listen, I'm.

Speaker 15 (12:51):
Thinking about more of Yes, Detroit, and I'm thinking about
more than of New York New York Black make make
black people look fucking bad?

Speaker 9 (13:03):
Do like herd rate crime, the Birth of Games.

Speaker 15 (13:10):
Uh, I reably wait rate two at the same I mean, like, yes,
I'm sorry.

Speaker 9 (13:14):
It may feel bad, but I'm not. I'm not sorry.

Speaker 15 (13:17):
You got places like Nork to Northew Jersey, lest I
can keep my people out of it because who Nork
is some ship? Yes, definitely DC. And the crazy thing
is why is DC the way it is? That's supposed
to be the capital kind of confused Baltimore. But do
they make them look bad or are they actually fucked up?

(13:39):
People don't want to do better for themselves.

Speaker 19 (13:42):
I mean, d C we could even get if we
get in it again in Texas to Dallas, Houston, like
all all the cities that have again, access to some
of the most beautiful women. Even the men in Miami
like they have access to some of the most beautiful

(14:03):
women and don't know how to act. They don't know
how to carry it. You would think, y'all, I got
access to all these women. I'm used to this, you
know what I mean. The access is there. I take
it for granted, so I don't have to act a
full But a lot of times that access shows you
bad character because they lack self control, They lack self
they lack self discipline. Now they're out here, you know,

(14:25):
embarrassing they women women, you know, So is that go ahead?

Speaker 18 (14:30):
Christopher? Did you want to say something? Chris?

Speaker 19 (14:41):
No, okay, well, welcome to the stage. Hey, Ki, hi Lalita,
hi q four. Hey again, Rob, Chris, you back. I
don't know if your your app was glitchen Yeah, I.

Speaker 12 (14:53):
Was glitchener man. I came up because I heard Houston.
What about Houston?

Speaker 18 (14:57):
Yeah, y'all, y'all.

Speaker 9 (14:58):
Men, y'all filthy?

Speaker 3 (15:00):
Yeah, he said, he said that the futing people are filthy.
Was going on that.

Speaker 18 (15:08):
We're just saying.

Speaker 12 (15:10):
Rabbit as, don't get mad at me.

Speaker 9 (15:13):
Say it.

Speaker 12 (15:15):
I debunked that a long time ago. Where you want
to start. I'm sorry, you guys are the most of
the race coming from you foreigners.

Speaker 9 (15:26):
Here you go, you're.

Speaker 12 (15:29):
Do you really want to have this conversation.

Speaker 9 (15:31):
Who's who's who?

Speaker 18 (15:33):
Who's the last year, who's the foreigner?

Speaker 12 (15:37):
Anybody that's not from Houston?

Speaker 19 (15:39):
That's crazy.

Speaker 22 (15:44):
Country?

Speaker 17 (15:46):
It is.

Speaker 15 (15:46):
Actually the United States made it to states. Every every
every state is really a country. So he got that,
that's cool.

Speaker 9 (15:55):
We just united. Is that we don't need passportsponing. I
don't want to go through that right there. But yeah,
I look at the news all right.

Speaker 15 (16:01):
In the news say that you guys are filthy over there,
you're having sex, you're doing crazy stuff over there, and
they blame it on the Black Listen, if they put
on black women, it's the black men that's having sexual
black women.

Speaker 9 (16:16):
And but wait, I'm just I'm just telling you what
does that say.

Speaker 15 (16:25):
I'm just telling you what the things I have researched
that came across this is what they're saying.

Speaker 9 (16:29):
I'm not saying this.

Speaker 12 (16:32):
Okay, thank you for your submission. Yes, most of that
I have read. Most of that I have read through.
I went ahead and debunked it last year a lot
of people like to conflate, and also a lot of
people like to come to Houston do their thing. Whatever.
I guess get tested down here, and when the stats
check out, they're gonna say it was taken from a

(16:54):
hospital or clinic in Houston. So you guys already affected
at l You guys try to make your way to Houston.
Good try, y'all could go to DC. There's plenty of
black people there. How about that memphenscens nice around this
time of year. So I don't know what you guys
will talk about again. I could put the Lincoln in
this chap. I debunked those sity statistics last year.

Speaker 23 (17:16):
That's not that's no longer going to talk a port,
Chris dou People still believe those are you saying? People
still believe that foolishes It was going around but Houston, U, Yes,
that's crazy.

Speaker 3 (17:29):
What's the foolishness, Cory, let's talk about it.

Speaker 6 (17:31):
Broose.

Speaker 23 (17:33):
Those those syphilis and STD stats were grossly conflated, and
people was passing around and it.

Speaker 6 (17:41):
Just wasn't the truth. No, I'm not, I'm not. I'm
not saying.

Speaker 23 (17:45):
I mean, obviously, Houston being one of the top five cities,
the largest five cities in this country.

Speaker 6 (17:49):
I'm sure.

Speaker 23 (17:50):
Uh, the SDD rate is pretty elevated, especially with the
reputation of Houston.

Speaker 3 (17:55):
You know, people say, hey, if you want to go party,
go to Houston.

Speaker 23 (17:58):
But the fact is that those that to that link
that everybody was passing around stack it just wasn't true.

Speaker 3 (18:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (18:04):
I hate the I hate the information. That's like, you
got to get the real information. You're gonna have the information,
get the real statistics, get the real data whatever.

Speaker 3 (18:12):
Come on. Yeah, I feel that though.

Speaker 9 (18:14):
You you know what I'm saying. Yeah, yeah, yeah, but listen,
just because you don't own the city.

Speaker 1 (18:19):
Yeah, why you Houston?

Speaker 9 (18:21):
You you well, I'm just talking. I just talked about Houston, Detroit.
I talked about my city. I talked about everyone's seats.

Speaker 15 (18:29):
But you guys will come in and willmill like like
you motherfuckers own that city.

Speaker 8 (18:34):
Committee is committee and to.

Speaker 9 (18:37):
Stay.

Speaker 3 (18:40):
Yeah, he's from Oregon.

Speaker 9 (18:45):
Ship we started, We saw it, Rosie. We sorry a lot,
don't do I know, I know, don't worry. Don't worry
about those guys. They're they're harmless. You know what I'm saying. Listen.
Commedia in two thousand and two.

Speaker 15 (18:56):
Houston report that about thirty one thousand, four hundred and
six cases are at a rate of.

Speaker 9 (19:00):
Six hundred and fifty nine fifty six point.

Speaker 15 (19:03):
Nine per one thousand, second only to Dallas eight point
eight four eight point seven.

Speaker 9 (19:09):
Well over the state average.

Speaker 15 (19:11):
Filthy all SDI between twenty sixteen and twenty twenty two,
Harrison County and Clue, Houston and ced Texas average in
all major SDI commydia, galler rhea, syphilis, and HIV. I mean,
do mister, go one. Houston is not amongst the top ten. Okay,
Houston is not amongst the top ten rank in the US.

(19:32):
This was two thousand and two. So let's let's let's
you know, I don't want to beat up on Houston
like this. I just did that.

Speaker 9 (19:37):
Because instead of coming on the stage and talking about
the other one, you want to defend Houston. This is
one of the points I want to make. That's nothing.
I'm look for two thousand and two to twenty twenty
five and then we can conclude people from there.

Speaker 23 (19:49):
Get ahead, Hey man, how the black people in Portland,
Oregon state.

Speaker 3 (19:54):
I'm sicking.

Speaker 9 (19:57):
Disrespected. Ut don't just organ brothers. I'm from Essenson County.
I'm from North from Jersey. Uh, these stories right next
to North looks.

Speaker 3 (20:10):
So you're telling me so from THEOD that's what you said.

Speaker 15 (20:14):
Told that I'm talked about my my, my place where I'm.

Speaker 9 (20:19):
From, Like you feel me?

Speaker 15 (20:20):
Like we make we make we make black posts look
bad too, gang banging, all types of ship scamming and everything.

Speaker 9 (20:28):
So why y'all so but hurt? I talked about everyone?
I'm a meete up.

Speaker 3 (20:33):
Wow, don't that be you know what?

Speaker 8 (20:35):
Man?

Speaker 6 (20:36):
Don't they steal cars a lot out there?

Speaker 24 (20:38):
Oh?

Speaker 11 (20:38):
Man?

Speaker 3 (20:39):
I heard, I heard.

Speaker 2 (20:40):
The hijacking rate is pretty heard that it is heard that.

Speaker 9 (20:46):
I just we're gonna speak to the title, right, So
that's what's going on. I don't feel hit. Why these
guys feel hit?

Speaker 19 (20:51):
I mean, I haven't experienced any any of that. I
live in Jersey. But I also live in a nice
part of Jersey. So there's that. But according to stats,
the top metro areas with the highest combines rate combined
rates of chlamydia, ganerias, syphilis, and HIV are number one

(21:12):
according to and this is according to the CDC updated
January thirteen to twenty twenty five. Number one is Detroit, Michigan.
Number two is Philadelphia, Philadelphia.

Speaker 3 (21:27):
Whoa hold on?

Speaker 6 (21:29):
Hold up?

Speaker 9 (21:29):
Hold on?

Speaker 1 (21:30):
Hold on?

Speaker 3 (21:30):
Which what's the next one?

Speaker 9 (21:31):
Hold on? Damn?

Speaker 18 (21:36):
Number three is Montgomery, Alabama.

Speaker 8 (21:38):
Wow, thirty country.

Speaker 18 (21:41):
Number four is Memphis, Tennessee.

Speaker 19 (21:46):
Oh my, yeah, yeah and yeah.

Speaker 18 (21:51):
And number five is jacksonne Wow Jackson what Jackson?

Speaker 3 (21:55):
What's to.

Speaker 17 (22:03):
Thank you?

Speaker 12 (22:03):
I appreciate you.

Speaker 3 (22:04):
Damn t just broke that down, Christopher, how you feel
about that? Man? That whole damn list? Brother, Let's let's
you got to.

Speaker 6 (22:10):
Ask a question.

Speaker 13 (22:11):
You do ask a question.

Speaker 9 (22:13):
You do have to ask a question.

Speaker 15 (22:15):
That of that of those statistic what population is geared
towards the black folks?

Speaker 9 (22:22):
From you? Because of the title what she was talking about.

Speaker 18 (22:30):
Stay tuned one moment, please, Christian.

Speaker 6 (22:34):
Go ahead, Rosie, but I appreciate the list because I.

Speaker 12 (22:44):
Can quite.

Speaker 2 (22:47):
She must be busy. Go ahead, Christopher, over to you, Rosie,
Come in whenever you're ready.

Speaker 6 (22:52):
Stact.

Speaker 23 (22:52):
All I know is I just heard the niggas from
Detroit and Philadelphia got some.

Speaker 3 (22:59):
Cory.

Speaker 6 (23:01):
That's what I heard it.

Speaker 23 (23:03):
And feeling Montgomery, Alabama got some dirty dirt. In Memphis,
Tennessee got the dirtiest meat in the country.

Speaker 12 (23:11):
Oh man, God, y'all said, y'all said Houston was number one.
She just read the status the rest of my case
and there's links in the stash.

Speaker 18 (23:20):
To prove we never say Houston was number one.

Speaker 12 (23:26):
You know this is so with your guard down.

Speaker 23 (23:29):
Brother, Hey Chris, but hey Chris, but to your point,
look at my brother loud J down and the Google
he keeps saying Houston, Houston, Houston.

Speaker 1 (23:40):
Tee.

Speaker 6 (23:40):
The guys, will you will you do be a favorite
one more time? You know what? Can you read? The
top five cities per capital.

Speaker 23 (23:49):
Has got the nastiest peen in this country?

Speaker 17 (23:56):
Please?

Speaker 18 (23:58):
What the fuck the CDC?

Speaker 19 (24:01):
And this was updated January thirteenth, twenty twenty five. It's
number one Detroit, Michigan, Number two, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, number three, Montgomery, Alabama,
number four, Memphis, Tennessee, number five, Jackson, Mississippi. And of

(24:21):
those of those, uh well, I'm gonna get back to y'all.
Let me read this properly and I'll get back to
y'all on the other party.

Speaker 3 (24:31):
We need tea with another update. Go ahead to me.

Speaker 12 (24:34):
I need to do a follow up episode.

Speaker 14 (24:36):
It's Houston on the top ten or the top twenty.

Speaker 6 (24:39):
Good question.

Speaker 9 (24:41):
Half, I like, I'm already shard state. I already said,
I already.

Speaker 15 (24:48):
Answered that when I write it out, I said, they
are not.

Speaker 9 (24:50):
On the top ten states.

Speaker 23 (24:52):
I said that, Yeah, but Joe stands from two thousand
and one.

Speaker 15 (24:56):
Yeah, yeah, nineteen twenty two.

Speaker 14 (25:03):
Oh is that what I did to you? That's crazy?

Speaker 3 (25:05):
Never mm hmm, what you got to say earlier. Let's
talk about it.

Speaker 25 (25:18):
I guess maybe by maybe by stereotypes, you know, just
like people are saying, you know, they talk about Atlanta
and they talk about like reputations that the cities have
you know, done to themselves though, so I feel like
it's the black men that make those cities look bad,
not the cities that make them look bad, but now
that they have like a reputation that precedes themselves, kind
of like some of the men on the Clubhouse app.

Speaker 14 (25:37):
I could see how it could be an issue.

Speaker 25 (25:39):
I feel like there are you know, Atlanta, everyone knows
people say that's a gay city, and then Houston's a
party city and Miami is a you know, party city.
So if you hear people say they're going to these places,
a lot of times they get judged as well.

Speaker 14 (25:51):
It's just you know, that's how life works. People say
that they don't judge, but they're lying.

Speaker 23 (25:56):
Lada, I got a question for you. Welcome, welcome to
the room, and happy Monday. Tolda but as the black people,
we believe that Houston, Texas is the party city. Are
you surprised to know that the dirtiest reproductive organs in
this country are in Detroit, Michigan?

Speaker 6 (26:13):
What am I, Lilda?

Speaker 14 (26:15):
It doesn't surprise me? Is it does have a reputation
for in the Gutta?

Speaker 23 (26:19):
So I mean, okay, are you surprised that Philadelphia the
home of the Super Bowl champs?

Speaker 6 (26:30):
Do you think Stack?

Speaker 23 (26:31):
Maybe they started, you know, they was they was doing
a bunch of butt naked wrestling after the Eagles won
the Super Bowl.

Speaker 6 (26:42):
I'm just saying, what you think what happened? Stack?

Speaker 23 (26:45):
When did Philadelphia West Philadelphia born and raised?

Speaker 6 (26:50):
When when did Philadelphia.

Speaker 23 (26:51):
Becomes great the home of the dirty box?

Speaker 2 (26:56):
I have no clue that's what That's what's going on
in these city, bro. It's the top t just rope
broken down. Corey.

Speaker 3 (27:03):
She just sold y'all a where basically where to avoid? Right.

Speaker 23 (27:07):
If you're looking for clean, clean, don't go there. Pretty
much right. Oh my god, hey, Stack, we got an update.
I don't know I'm on this roadcast.

Speaker 6 (27:15):
I don't know. I don't know how to do the
sound effects. Yes, but here's an update.

Speaker 23 (27:19):
Uh, Detroit, Philadelphia, Montgomery Mifer Center.

Speaker 6 (27:23):
See coming up in number six.

Speaker 23 (27:25):
Baltimore, Maryland, New Orleans, Louisiana, Washington, d C. Saint Louis, Baton, Rouge, Louisiana,
San Francisco, California, Jesus Christ Jackson, Mississippi, Cleveland, Ohio, Columbia,
South Carolina, El Paso, Texas.

Speaker 6 (27:43):
Yeah, stay away from these places, guys, Strap up. I
don't know. I don't, Stack. What would you tell people
with this.

Speaker 2 (27:48):
Traveler, I would I would tell people to stay away
from them dum dumb, dumb, dumb fucking spots. I would
just say, you know what, these ain't the safe spots.
These this ain't where to go. This ain't where.

Speaker 3 (28:00):
It ain't where it's at.

Speaker 2 (28:01):
If you want to find love and be STD free,
don't go to those places.

Speaker 3 (28:05):
That's what I would say, Cory.

Speaker 14 (28:08):
And that's not realistic.

Speaker 25 (28:09):
And the fact that like people hearing that might go
to those places, like into a different place. It's like
sexual responsibilities is something that you need to have and do,
uh to avoid these type of things, no matter what
city you're in.

Speaker 14 (28:21):
That's for That's a fact.

Speaker 23 (28:23):
Yeah, but you know, you know, I just I got
to pick up my brother yay, just a little bit
because Yeah, came in here bloviating about Houston loud down
in the Google bloviating about Houston. Houston doesn't seem to
be on the top team list deck. I mean, unless
I'm blind, I'm missing it. But sounds like it's some
dirty boxes all over the place. And while everybody was

(28:44):
talking about Houston. Interesting to me, it's very interesting.

Speaker 26 (28:47):
Well, well, in fairness, sir Corey, I named a few cities,
but you guys got a little sensitive.

Speaker 9 (28:57):
And so when I mentioned, uh, you and we, they
don't use it. I don't know if you got what
is so sensitive and we see sensitive. I didn't do anything.

Speaker 15 (29:10):
My daughter, Why when you said why wouldn't you said
Baltimore Stacks didn't come off the mic and say, well,
what the funk going on?

Speaker 9 (29:19):
Man?

Speaker 23 (29:22):
Okay, that's true. Maybe I was, you know what, Yeah,
you know how to take that back. I'm back up
a little bit. I was a little triggered. My children
are in Houston. I got ties in Houston, and so
what what I will do is.

Speaker 9 (29:35):
I push.

Speaker 6 (29:36):
I appreciate that definitely. I'm definitely with triggering.

Speaker 3 (29:43):
Oh my yo, can y'all do me a favor?

Speaker 2 (29:45):
So look, if y'all just joining, we're talking about do
different cities make black men look bad? I need you
try to pick the room out and share the room
off for me. I got Corey with me, Rosie, I
got my brother yay, Albert got something coming up as well.

Speaker 3 (29:57):
I got doctor phone with me. Leave the Christopher threes
with me.

Speaker 2 (30:01):
Puller like yo, I need y'all to ping in this
room out and share this room out for me so
that way we can have more people coming in this
goddamn conversation. I don't want to just be the only
people in this goddamn conversation. Let's tap in with more people.
But pining this shit out? Quick reset, let's stop.

Speaker 27 (30:17):
I must have Hunt the beat.

Speaker 2 (30:21):
A free throat man.

Speaker 27 (30:22):
Damn call like Temple the Lambs tell him three broke.

Speaker 9 (30:24):
Knilla nigga to the cross.

Speaker 27 (30:25):
He walking around like te So what's up with this?
Your throne as niggas trying to see Compton the hen
the streak and hey, you fucking mall and.

Speaker 8 (30:31):
Mama, how many options here you got it?

Speaker 6 (30:32):
How mean it's too many options?

Speaker 27 (30:34):
Coup in the pass on this body.

Speaker 9 (30:35):
I'm john stocked and.

Speaker 27 (30:38):
Beat your ass and I have to buy a little
guy watching. Sometimes you gotta pop out and show niggas
so that for I budget man, I'm no want that
up to score with him. I walk him down the
whole time. I know he got some hole in him.
Hold on him the next door. Shit bully doth flow
on him and say, Drake, I hear you like I'm young.
You better have a go to sell black one to
any bitch that talk to him and there in love.
Just make sure you hot your little sister from him.

(31:00):
They tell me, trails don't only want to get your
hammy downs to party at the party plan with his nose.

Speaker 28 (31:04):
Now, blacker got a weird case.

Speaker 1 (31:06):
Why shit around?

Speaker 27 (31:07):
So the five voice fighten that fuck them up, white
chow them like a bitch.

Speaker 17 (31:15):
Ain't you tired?

Speaker 27 (31:16):
I'm gonna strike a chord and it's probably a minor.

Speaker 3 (31:21):
Fuck we doing. Man, ping the room out, share the
room out.

Speaker 2 (31:24):
I appreciate everybody for joining, but I want to get
back to the conversation because do different cities make black
men look bad? Personally? When I surround myself with, you know,
people in my city, they don't. I don't really see
the you know, the fuckery. But then you'll go to
other cities and you'll see the fuckery. I feel like
it's bad parts in every city, and it's black, bad
black men that come out of every city. It's just

(31:45):
all up to whatever you you know, you want to
surround yourself with. But yes, I feel like different cities
do make black men look bad to come to a conclusion,
to get straight to the topic, and I want to
hear what more people have to say about this. So
if you haven't chimed in ping the room out, share
a room for me, but then also grab the mic
because we might do popcorn. I got Corey here, Rosie, yay, Albert,

(32:06):
everybody's in here, ping the room out, share the room out.
And y'all know that this topic was inspired right from
wife yea man that she just pulled up. So I
love y'all, let's continue this shit. And I want to
co in. I want to go in. I want to
go in and do different cities make black men look bad?
Who else is grabbing this mic right now? Who's coming in?

Speaker 11 (32:24):
I think certain black men make the cities look bad.
So I live in Jacksonville, Florida, and Jacksonville is a
great city until you get around certain people and Jacksonville
becomes very ghetto. But at the same time, on the
outside looking in, a lot of people only know Jacksonville
for the killings that happen or the hood and stuff

(32:48):
like that. So I think certain people can make the
city look bad.

Speaker 2 (32:52):
Okay, So do you feel like you have to be
from the city, doctor, I want to talk to you,
doctor Vaughan. Do you have to be from the city
to know that it's not like all like that? Or
do you feel like people are just looking from the
outside in and there is judging.

Speaker 11 (33:04):
You don't have to be from the city, but you
definitely have to spend a lot of time here because
there's no way to experience Jacksonville in one day. It's
too big and it's too many different parts of Jacksonville.
We have a whole Jewish side, we got a Hispanic side,
we got the Asian side, the black people side, the
white people side, and you know, oddly enough, it is
very segregated here. Still, so depending on what side of

(33:26):
town you're on, you're gonna get a different vibe.

Speaker 9 (33:29):
Yeah, the Campbodi is to stick up there in Jacksonville.
I actually have the white no that says this is
what I'm gonna say.

Speaker 15 (33:36):
Jacksonville when I went up did to the port was
a piece of ship, raggedy looking place. I'm like, yo,
why is this place by the port? And a bunch
of black folks look like crack is leaning over at
you know shake. I'm like, Yo, this is terrible, this
is horrible.

Speaker 9 (33:50):
Why would this?

Speaker 15 (33:50):
Why would why would the city allow them to linger
around these places at the port and stuff like that?
And I was like, oh, I would never go to
Jacksonville ever to fuck again my life.

Speaker 9 (34:01):
And that's on the black Pole's side. So do you
think that it's.

Speaker 15 (34:04):
More of the media that's proper that's pushing this propaganda
out there or is it really true?

Speaker 9 (34:11):
Because if you if you want to look at it,
if you're not doing something, they cannot push nothing out there.

Speaker 14 (34:16):
I think it's true though.

Speaker 11 (34:17):
So we moved to Jacksonville from Georgia, from a small
town in Georgia, and our first week, like we didn't
know about the different size of Jacksonville. So our first
week here, it was a drive by shooting two streets
over from us with some girls shot a boy house up,
like that's been the norm.

Speaker 6 (34:38):
Wait wait wait, I told you the women down here
are different.

Speaker 9 (34:41):
I told you.

Speaker 11 (34:44):
Yeah, it was a group of girls that shot up
a boy's house. So, and that was back when it
wasn't as bad now, Like, I don't know if.

Speaker 23 (34:51):
Y'all know who wait, doctor va, doctor vaughan, I'm sorry,
I think my I think my ideo was going out.
Did you say the chicks did a drive by shooting
on the dude house and that was back when it
wasn't as bad?

Speaker 6 (35:06):
Did I hear you say that?

Speaker 20 (35:07):
Yeah?

Speaker 11 (35:08):
And one of time Jacksonville was the murder capital of Florida.

Speaker 14 (35:11):
Like, I don't know if people.

Speaker 17 (35:12):
Knew that it was.

Speaker 9 (35:15):
I'm in the same pete, doc, So you know I
know what I'm talking about.

Speaker 23 (35:18):
Right, But but but but doctor Vaughan, Yeah, what I
thought Jacksonville was full of old people.

Speaker 6 (35:25):
I thought that was a retirement.

Speaker 9 (35:27):
Were wrong.

Speaker 15 (35:29):
M you gotta go down for the old people, all
the old money.

Speaker 12 (35:36):
Yeah, Florida ladies and gentlemen, Florida.

Speaker 11 (35:44):
Yes, yes, yes, there's part so that I want to
go to because no, I don't live over there, not
going over there.

Speaker 14 (35:53):
I don't have no business over there.

Speaker 18 (35:54):
They have nothing to do with me.

Speaker 15 (35:56):
I move side of Saint Pete. I ain't gonna lie.
I can't be around your niggas anymore. I get I
gotta go and live somewhere else. But I'll come down
and hang out at time, and so I'm not bringing
my kids down there.

Speaker 9 (36:09):
I'm not going to do and guess what. I will
go to the bars out there, yes, all the time.

Speaker 15 (36:13):
I love being around my people, but I don't want
to shoot nobody, so I like to, you know, stay
a little further away.

Speaker 9 (36:20):
But it's fucked up down there, especially especially in Jacksonville.

Speaker 23 (36:24):
Hey, I just want to give an update to Clubhouse
real quick. This is breaking news. Breaking news to the Clubhouse.
If you are a single man looking to meet a wife,
the number one city in the country at this point
to meet a wife is going to be Dallas, Texas. Uh.

Speaker 6 (36:39):
If you're looking to have a good time, you want
to go. Listen.

Speaker 23 (36:42):
Man, it's so many single women moving to Dallas, Texas
right now.

Speaker 6 (36:46):
Man, it's crazy.

Speaker 23 (36:47):
Hey, yeah, I don't know if you guys agree with this,
but as a single black man, the top three cities
to go to top four I would say would be Houston, Texas, Dallas, Texas, Washington, DC, Atlanta, Georgia.
These are the city's stacked, depending on what side you
go to. Uh that make black men look good, not
not not bad. We don't we don't want to look bad.

(37:09):
But yeah, brother, if y'all single, y'all need to check
out Dallas texts. I'm trying to tell you.

Speaker 3 (37:13):
Thank me later.

Speaker 15 (37:14):
What are you what are you getting your sources from?
Because I hope it is not uh so sources that's
connected the day.

Speaker 9 (37:20):
To B to B. I hope it's not one of those.

Speaker 6 (37:24):
No, no, no, no, no, no no.

Speaker 23 (37:26):
These stats came directly from, uh the research of Himothy University, guys,
And if you don't know what Himothan University is, pretty
soon that we will be rolling out curriculum teaching men
how to be with him and teaching women how to
acquire him and attract him. But uh, until then, we'll
just give you updated stats on dating in this country. Dallas, Texas,
heret Houston, Texas, Washington, d C, Atlanta, Georgia. Let me

(37:49):
see what she put about Phoenix, and I'll be back.

Speaker 13 (37:54):
So to this title, history is winning.

Speaker 29 (37:58):
The only first responsible for somebody looking bad is himself
or herself.

Speaker 3 (38:04):
Uh oh, waking up.

Speaker 30 (38:06):
A city somebody else, the moon, Racism, slavery, the white
man is not responsible for me looking bad.

Speaker 31 (38:18):
It's the man and the man that makes myself look
bad because I'm accountable for the choices that make that
make me look bad.

Speaker 32 (38:24):
The fact, you know, buy me a bad city. So
that's why I look bad. Well, it's the city that
every boys around me acting crazy? So why why won't
I act crazy? Because it's my environment.

Speaker 30 (38:39):
The lack of accountability is making bad black men look
even worse.

Speaker 13 (38:44):
I'm done.

Speaker 33 (38:47):
I would say that's probably that's the wrong level of abstraction.
The question speaks to a group collective, which we are
responsible as a group to how we look to a degree.
So yes, individually, if we go down to that level
of abstraction, you're completely one hundred percent correct. But we
the world still does look at us collectively, so it
is still a valid question.

Speaker 23 (39:09):
Hey, I don't know this brother, but I like the
way he thinking. Doctor Albert, are you there?

Speaker 6 (39:15):
Are you done? Playing space?

Speaker 23 (39:16):
Listening to luthervanros with your wife man drinking on my time?

Speaker 6 (39:21):
Are you available?

Speaker 24 (39:24):
You know?

Speaker 23 (39:24):
Doctor Albert said he when he plays space, ain't no competition.
We're making love over here. This does the city of
Chicago collectively? Does that make black man look bad? Black men?
I'm sorry?

Speaker 6 (39:41):
What do you think?

Speaker 3 (39:41):
Stank?

Speaker 6 (39:43):
No talk to her?

Speaker 2 (39:46):
Say that again, Corey, repeat that for the new people
coming in and repeat it one more time.

Speaker 23 (39:51):
Does the city of Chicago shout out to my boy,
James walk to the stage, Brodie. Does the city of
Chicago collectively when you think of Chicago, when you think
of Old Block, when you think of the murder rate?
Does Chicago in the city itself? Does it make black
men look bad? Don't you think?

Speaker 2 (40:10):
Right, I'm gonna tell you right now, I'm gonna tell
y'all the truth, and I'm only gonna tell the truth.

Speaker 3 (40:16):
And nothing but the truth.

Speaker 2 (40:18):
Yes, Yes, that city makes the black men look very hard.
There's an animalistic city, right. And I ain't I got
none against Syraq, I ain't got nothing against the cargo.
I would go there, I would go there, James, I'll go, Albert,
I go I'll go. But y'all know that is one
of the most craziest cities for a black man to

(40:42):
even touch foot in, or you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 13 (40:45):
It just depends on where you are.

Speaker 3 (40:46):
Nah, I'll give y'all.

Speaker 6 (40:48):
Some black men make it in, but they don't make
it out snatched.

Speaker 1 (40:56):
Oh Ship, where is.

Speaker 34 (40:58):
It that y'all feelers go? Because Chicago is not just
Old Block.

Speaker 35 (41:03):
There's Chicago, Bro.

Speaker 34 (41:10):
There's there's Higher Park, There's South Shore, there's Evergreen, There's Chatham,
There's Uh, let's see what else.

Speaker 36 (41:17):
We got Maywood, we got Beverly.

Speaker 34 (41:22):
Then if you go out to the southwest suburbs, you
got you know, Flossmore, Homewood, Max and this, that and
the third.

Speaker 36 (41:28):
Go a little bit further, you go to Ship, creep Cree, Illinois.

Speaker 23 (41:34):
Keep going James, don't. Don't keep going south, James. Then
you get to Harvey.

Speaker 28 (41:40):
Not Harvey, not that one.

Speaker 6 (41:42):
Yeah, I mean James, what I was doing.

Speaker 34 (41:44):
Yeah, but see Harvey small as hell. Harvey is like
you walk a couple of blocks and you out of there,
like Harvey. That's a blip on the on the on
the map.

Speaker 36 (41:54):
That and Dalton.

Speaker 34 (41:55):
We don't even count that ship. If you black and
you in Chicago, them places are just named. That's that
is your residency. That is that is what we call
a krim Dela Creme of Chicago. And yeah, although Kabrina
Green had a you know, had a bad rep at
you know, at one point in time, Cabrina Green has

(42:16):
had some you would say, it's had some bit of
a makeover. You got you got more blacks downtown Chicago,
University of Chicago now than you ever have. We're talking
the upper echelon of Chicago. You got Marina City. The
condo we had was actually my condo roomed with my

(42:41):
my large bay window looked right out at Lake Michigan.
I could see as far south is forty five hundred
south past the Shit of Cream, as far north as
I could see right out at Navy Pier.

Speaker 36 (42:54):
That's no third.

Speaker 34 (42:55):
Like, yeah, you come to Chicago, Shottown is a place
to be and out in here. Any idiot that tells
you that the pizza of Chicago is Deep Dish, slap him.

Speaker 36 (43:11):
Deep Dishes has nothing to do with Chicago. Ain't nothing.

Speaker 34 (43:13):
Ain't nobody repping Deep Dish pizza or Giedonald's or Chicago.

Speaker 23 (43:19):
James don't do Donald's like that. James, James, don't do.

Speaker 36 (43:25):
It's a heart attack on the plate that ship.

Speaker 23 (43:27):
If you want a James, every time I flew in
the Midway, Ay James, every time I flew in the Midway,
I would stop forgiving me.

Speaker 6 (43:35):
I would stop at Gio Donald's. Bro, you're killing me.

Speaker 36 (43:37):
I gotta stop.

Speaker 34 (43:38):
Man, if you're gonna do that, go down to go
to go to Jewtown, Maxwell Street Polish. But if you're
gonna do something, you go to spots like that. Hell,
we got my man Lawrenz Tate got a restaurant downtown. Now,
like you know what I'm saying. You gotta what's my
one spot? I used to go to.

Speaker 36 (44:00):
Off for forty seventh and I don't know, I'm forgetting
the cross.

Speaker 23 (44:03):
Streets A James, A James, I would prefer I would
prefer pizza Puffs over g Downo's brother.

Speaker 36 (44:13):
That's okay. Yeah, you know what, I'm gonna go back
on me.

Speaker 9 (44:17):
Yeah, I agree, Yeah, you know.

Speaker 36 (44:21):
If you can go what is happening?

Speaker 6 (44:26):
Just be just to be clear.

Speaker 23 (44:27):
I was born in uh Blue Island, Cook County. My
family is from Harvey, but they went to throwing wood
throwing Ridge.

Speaker 6 (44:35):
I always say I'm Chicago bread.

Speaker 23 (44:37):
But I'm Texas raised, right, So if y'all from Chicago
and you don't like pizza puffs, what what are we
talking about?

Speaker 6 (44:47):
That's crazy. I'm out of here. James, you got it
that this is crazy.

Speaker 11 (44:52):
There's always a fight. There's always a fight between the
best pizza between New York in Chicago, and that's crazy.
I am Indianapolis born. I want to say Chicago, Philly raised,

(45:17):
Florida lived, and I'm gonna tell you Chicago's most definitely
got the pizza.

Speaker 14 (45:26):
And I don't.

Speaker 11 (45:27):
I just don't understand why people are confused, why they're delusional.
So that's all I gotta say.

Speaker 2 (45:35):
Listen, I want to get back to the topic too.
I don't be talking about pizza and I love pizza too,
but that.

Speaker 6 (45:41):
And that's just that.

Speaker 23 (45:42):
That was James, that what he was talking about.

Speaker 8 (45:46):
I've been putting.

Speaker 11 (45:48):
I've been putting in the cities and stuff like that.
If it makes the man look bad, and I want
to say that proximity matters. And it's a lot of
us in here that no you know, different celebrities and classism,
it's going to take a part. And if the man

(46:11):
looked bad and I'm noticing that as I read from chat,
GPT and stuff like that, and I just have to
be honest in saying that who you're around and stuff
like that, fortunately is just going to turn out that way.

(46:31):
So I just wanted to say.

Speaker 36 (46:32):
That, you know what, I gotta do this. I meant
to say this.

Speaker 34 (46:38):
You can't say Chicago without talking about the greatest man
ever to down the game of basketball.

Speaker 36 (46:45):
So we y'all talking about make Chicago look? Please? Are
we talking? Really?

Speaker 34 (46:51):
If there would not be nobody else And let's be clear,
Lebron couldn't touch MJ if he tried.

Speaker 23 (47:03):
Okay, all right, Stack, he Stak moved his brother from
I don't know what's going on here, Stak. We were
talking about see listen your stage right now, Stack is
making black men look bad?

Speaker 36 (47:13):
Right.

Speaker 23 (47:13):
I spoke to James. You know what I'm saying, Brody,
James is so intelligent. That's a good brother. He always
so mild, you know, just a good tempo when he speaks.
And then he goes and says something crazy like that.
That's worse than that. It happens in Yay City.

Speaker 6 (47:33):
It was crazy. It's crazy.

Speaker 15 (47:35):
So uh, South Carolina too fucked up.

Speaker 36 (47:40):
That's a fact.

Speaker 34 (47:41):
So doctor Heimothy, you're trying to tell me that the
next fifty years from now that the younger generation that's
gonna be whearing Nike is gonna be singing Lebron. Last
time I checked this this the single along goes like
I want to be I want to be like Mike.
Ain't never been no jingle talking about want to be
like Lebron ever.

Speaker 23 (48:02):
So James, James, James, listen, you're a very intelligent person.
You understand business, you understand marketing. Let's just say that
Michael Jordan obviously had a marketing campaign that will probably
last for generations.

Speaker 6 (48:15):
That's a fact.

Speaker 23 (48:15):
But what I'm saying is, James, I got a twelve
year old son and we literally was sitting at a
restaurant yesterday talking and he said, Daddy, who's your top
five players?

Speaker 6 (48:24):
I said, Michael Jordan, Lebron James.

Speaker 23 (48:27):
My twelve year old son said Lebron James than Michael Jordan.
All I'm saying is sometimes we can be prisoners of
the moment, and I think that this younger generation that's
watching Lebron and seeing the numbers that he's put up
and the things that he's done. I think even James.
There was a stat that was there was a poll

(48:47):
taking for the younger players in the NBA. Don't keep
in mind they came up watching Lebron and the younger
players in the NBA are saying that Lebron James is
the greatest of all times. I'm sorry, I think Lebron James.

Speaker 37 (49:00):
The younger players did not say that. I know, what's
what about? They said Kobe Jordan's and fucking Paul George.

Speaker 6 (49:07):
Okay, bro, I don't even know who this nigga is.

Speaker 3 (49:09):
I don't know. I don't know.

Speaker 23 (49:10):
First of all, wherever you're from, you make your city
look bad because you come up with aggression.

Speaker 6 (49:16):
Like you. Listen.

Speaker 23 (49:17):
I just want to say, I hope that you have
more intelligence I have. I hope you got more intelligence
to dig down into your bag and pull.

Speaker 6 (49:24):
Out a word to express you got who I got?

Speaker 9 (49:28):
Eighteen foot centers too?

Speaker 38 (49:29):
Brothers, Cory, you were talking to you, brother, Yeah, brother,
you know you're right.

Speaker 23 (49:39):
I'm a nobody. It's been on the cover of Time
magazine twice. Nigga, check your reps when you talk to
me right now. That's that's a fact. Yeah, you should
go ahead, James, I'm listening.

Speaker 11 (49:50):
No, Doug, I can't believe you just said that again.

Speaker 36 (49:56):
You know what, much love to you, big respect.

Speaker 34 (50:00):
Here's my thing, what you just said, that last comment
sounds like the mis education of the Negro Volume two.

Speaker 6 (50:08):
Oh my god, we're so.

Speaker 36 (50:12):
So now so now I'm hearing that Lebron is better.

Speaker 34 (50:16):
Sounds like the last generation failed that this generation educating
them properly. See, Lebron ain't had nobody to contend with.
He's just a big overwhewn.

Speaker 36 (50:27):
I hate to say this. I won't call him man
an eight.

Speaker 34 (50:31):
But you know he's he's a bit of tyrannosaurss.

Speaker 36 (50:36):
Not to mention, he didn't have the likes of a
Keema Lajahwan.

Speaker 34 (50:42):
He didn't have the likes of the Kemmu Tombo, Karl Malone, Shaq.

Speaker 36 (50:48):
Drexler, Kevin Garne.

Speaker 34 (50:53):
Listen, these cats up there walking these courts now, the
don't have competition on the court. In fact, they so
much as even blink at a player the wrong where
they calling a damn what a technical. In that day,
you had to continue down the court. Let's let's go
to I think it was before we had the three

(51:17):
p Game six, they defended the brother before he can
even get off the line. Jordan had to earn every
inch on that court from the baseline on one side
of the court all the way down. And guess what
I think. We also remember him gliding in the air
with the ball the other hand. The ball went to

(51:38):
the left hand and he still scored. Made three players
in the air swatting like flyers look like idiots.

Speaker 36 (51:45):
You ain't gonna ever get a player that ever got
that kind of grace.

Speaker 6 (51:49):
James, who's your number two?

Speaker 34 (51:52):
My number two? Yes, hmm, that's a good question. Again,
you know my number two. And I have to go
back to that error, my number two. And I'm biased.

Speaker 6 (52:10):
We hear it, we hear the biases, and you're talking.

Speaker 36 (52:13):
You know I'm biased on this point. I get to AI.

Speaker 34 (52:19):
And he did make Mike look bad, but Mike was
on his way out when he made them knees shake
and almost break. But I have to give it to
a I uh. He did also change the game of
basketball many different ways. He just didn't get his due
nor credit. And in fact, what did they do stereotype

(52:40):
him and get him that? They packed him on up
out of the league, just because he had.

Speaker 9 (52:44):
A how.

Speaker 6 (52:56):
Let me tell you how we're getting back to the topic.
We're getting right, get.

Speaker 3 (53:00):
It back to the topic. And I need and I
need you try to pin this ship up and share.

Speaker 28 (53:04):
It up too, bro, Bro, I was going to segue
it back.

Speaker 23 (53:14):
I was, I was, I was were talking about we're
talking about what city, what city make black men look bad?
I don't know what city three is from, but I'm
sure he represents that city extremely well.

Speaker 9 (53:26):
Three.

Speaker 6 (53:26):
Where are you from, brother?

Speaker 37 (53:27):
I don't know what you want to hyper focus on me, man,
but I'm from the mayor West Detroit area, and you
know I got Troy in the building, bigger follower than
your brother Detroit in the building.

Speaker 23 (53:41):
Yeah, more followers, more followers. Okay, well, well, uh three,
welcome to the stage, brothers. So good to have you
catch that pin ticket in. We just heard a lot
about your city. Your city is number one and something
picular areas, but you have to go back to listen

(54:02):
to replays about where Detroit was number one, and so
we appreciate your presence here.

Speaker 3 (54:06):
Brother.

Speaker 6 (54:07):
There's no smoke on men. You got more followers and
higher ceilings.

Speaker 9 (54:12):
That's crazy, Corey.

Speaker 3 (54:17):
Yeah, but listen listen.

Speaker 2 (54:18):
Hold up, hold up, hold up, Corey, Corey Yo, yay,
hold up A three three three. I rock with you, bro,
But Corey real you know what I mean. I met
him in real life. Bro, Ain't none of that trolling ship.

Speaker 9 (54:28):
Bro.

Speaker 3 (54:28):
I rock with you like when you come through with
that ship. I hear you. But this he's real. He's
He's a real one too.

Speaker 8 (54:34):
Bro.

Speaker 2 (54:34):
You know what I'm saying. Okay, I'm just letting you know. Bro,
you don't never know who you're talking to either.

Speaker 3 (54:39):
Hey know what I'm saying. I know that's what this is.

Speaker 9 (54:43):
What's Corey, That's what's up.

Speaker 3 (54:45):
That's what's up. That's what's up. Bro, That's what's up.

Speaker 2 (54:50):
But let's still have respect for each other in the conversation.

Speaker 3 (54:53):
You understand that's all.

Speaker 9 (54:54):
Bro.

Speaker 3 (54:55):
Let's continue this ship.

Speaker 9 (54:56):
Man.

Speaker 2 (54:57):
If you guys are just joining, does your city make
black men look bad? This is shit I wanted to
talk about. But I need you guys to ping the
room up and share the room up for me. Please
do that.

Speaker 3 (55:05):
Ship. I don't know what you're doing.

Speaker 2 (55:07):
I don't know what's going on, but lets ping this
ship up so we can have more people join the conversation.

Speaker 3 (55:12):
Please, God damn, let's go.

Speaker 39 (55:14):
What the helly, what the helly, what the helly, what
the helly, what the helly, what the helly, what the helly,
what the helly?

Speaker 5 (55:26):
My new watch on President Dimoson Baghetti.

Speaker 8 (55:29):
What the helly, what the hellys, what the helly.

Speaker 6 (55:33):
What the hell is?

Speaker 1 (55:34):
What the what the sud?

Speaker 16 (55:37):
What the helly?

Speaker 5 (55:38):
My new watch on President Dimindson Baghetti? Fup outside? What
that sof spaghetti? Bad holds in a telly?

Speaker 1 (55:43):
What the helly?

Speaker 5 (55:44):
I get bad holes naked bat give me Becke? What
the helly that call me daddy? I have a fucking daddy.

Speaker 9 (55:49):
What the helly?

Speaker 1 (55:49):
Newba out of Jersey?

Speaker 10 (55:50):
I'm not mine?

Speaker 11 (55:51):
Bergin?

Speaker 7 (55:51):
What the helly?

Speaker 1 (55:52):
Girl? Buffer nerd and he a buffer, Sir?

Speaker 7 (55:54):
What the helly?

Speaker 1 (55:55):
Beyond man at risk before Annas Fursa, What the helly?

Speaker 4 (55:58):
Curd?

Speaker 1 (55:58):
I fuck is this?

Speaker 9 (55:59):
Got this?

Speaker 1 (55:59):
Nigga hell domins on spaghetti? Get at Becas?

Speaker 14 (56:03):
What the helen?

Speaker 5 (56:04):
What's on pregnant Presley necklace on spaghetti? What the hell
I don't know, No Jaxon, I know, Ben Frankie, what
the hell we gotta take my pills? I get two cranks?
What the hell and a hass.

Speaker 3 (56:15):
Hey, paint the room up, share the room up.

Speaker 2 (56:17):
If you guys are not a part of the media
mentors Megan Manchain, I don't know what the hell you're doing.
We network here too. It ain't just about you know
these top We like to have these topics, but I
also like to connect with individuals offline to see how
we can add value to each other. It's not just
about you know these crazy topics. Even though we like
putting these conversations together, also like connecting with people seeing

(56:38):
how we can add value to each other. But we
here today. Does your city make black men look bad?
I want to continue this conversation. I want to have
a respectful conversation and let's keep the floor open. Who's
grabbing it the next let's go.

Speaker 9 (56:54):
And no shots if you can't take them.

Speaker 3 (56:57):
Oh shit, oh shit, yay? Hold on, what why why
you say that? Corey?

Speaker 17 (57:01):
What?

Speaker 1 (57:01):
What what you say?

Speaker 15 (57:03):
You're just saying like I'm just staying like, if you're
gonna shoot somebody, you gotta expect to get shot back.
He can't tunk no one and think they're just gonna
sit there and get fucking the asses, especially if they
ain't no faggot.

Speaker 6 (57:14):
You know that's a fact.

Speaker 36 (57:16):
Yay.

Speaker 23 (57:16):
Let him know what it is. That's that New Jersey
coming out. See, Yay say he ain't making his city
look bad. He ain's standing no business even though with
all the old people. You know, Yay say he's standing
no business. And I'm with it. Man, Listen. I've always
said it like, man, don't shoot unless you could take
a shot back.

Speaker 6 (57:34):
Uh huh.

Speaker 23 (57:35):
But anyway, hey, let me ask you a question, Stack,
What are the top five cities when you just off
the top of the dame, what what are the top
five cities that you think make black men look bad?

Speaker 2 (57:45):
I mean, as soon as you as soon as we
opened the room, Cory, we heard it, bro, we it say.

Speaker 3 (57:50):
They said Chicago.

Speaker 2 (57:51):
You know. James came up and just was like, nah,
like you know what I mean. It just depends on
where you are. But I heard Chicago first. I heard
New York. I heard New Jersey. Yay, we heard missus Sippy.
We heard a lot of different ship bro, everything off
the rit but the first two that pops to my mind.
I told you Chicago, New York. Bro, those are the
first two if you think New Orleans. All right, so

(58:12):
talk about New Orleans or in Memphis too. I think
about Memphis too. I'm not gonna lie, James. I think
about Memphis too, Like everybody that's been dropping out there,
from the rappers to the random shoot, you know what
I'm saying, Memphis is a war zone.

Speaker 9 (58:24):
Two. What about ukin Bluff, Arkansas? I heard about those
guys too.

Speaker 23 (58:33):
That's a that's the smallest city. That's the smallest city.
But when I think, when I you know what, you know,
what's that? When I think about the dirty foot black
man in this country, I think New Jersey, Oh.

Speaker 2 (58:43):
My god, New Jersey, Orans.

Speaker 23 (58:49):
I think I think West Memphis, Arkansas.

Speaker 9 (58:53):
He just looked through my bio. He just looked my
bi seemed black feet. That was good, that was good.
That that's a trip of native tribe.

Speaker 6 (59:02):
I didn't you.

Speaker 9 (59:06):
Fucking jumpy fish.

Speaker 11 (59:12):
Say something? Because do we notice do we notice a
trend here with all of these cities that everybody is naming.
Do you notice the similarities from these cities? From these cities,
what what do they all have in common?

Speaker 9 (59:27):
Disease and gang violence?

Speaker 6 (59:30):
They got democratic.

Speaker 14 (59:36):
Exactly. It's the poverty rates, it's the low.

Speaker 24 (59:39):
Income, is the lack of means the lack of everything
that they need to be able to push themselves to
do better, get better, come up out of that.

Speaker 2 (59:51):
No, So so you're saying, Rosie, So you're saying it's
the environment and the lack of education.

Speaker 3 (59:55):
Why do you think I made the mentorship? So you
think you think.

Speaker 2 (59:58):
There's lack of the resources, lack the things that they need.

Speaker 3 (01:00:01):
Rosie, let's talk about it, of course.

Speaker 11 (01:00:03):
I mean, if you live in in privity, let's just
stick about it. If you're living in privity, if you're
living in a bad neighborhood, if you're live in where
you're not you can't easily access things that can help
you be better and get better. You know what I'm saying, Like,
what do you expect them? Some people have to do
things in order to make a living, to make ends

(01:00:24):
meet from day to day. So at the end of
the day, yes, they maybe make it looks bad, but
we're not looking at the fact that sometimes people have
to do what they need.

Speaker 14 (01:00:33):
To do to survive. At the end of the day,
look where they are.

Speaker 37 (01:00:39):
Let's get it the point of why, Like I want
to look at why are.

Speaker 3 (01:00:45):
These cities being strategically.

Speaker 8 (01:00:48):
Made like that?

Speaker 37 (01:00:49):
Because Chicago, La, all the cities that you guys named
are predominantly dominated by black people. And why all of
a sudden is it like that you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (01:01:02):
You know, I just I think it's three.

Speaker 37 (01:01:03):
I think it's what people But it's not just ignorance,
it's strategic.

Speaker 13 (01:01:11):
I don't finish, that's just simple ignorance.

Speaker 17 (01:01:16):
Bro.

Speaker 8 (01:01:16):
Just let the brother, let the doctor dude say what
you got to say?

Speaker 3 (01:01:20):
Bro.

Speaker 34 (01:01:21):
So he so he actually does a very good question
because I was on touch on that Chicago's history has
most I think most people in this room now was
the home of what major gangster?

Speaker 36 (01:01:37):
Anybody know what.

Speaker 37 (01:01:38):
You talking about?

Speaker 1 (01:01:39):
The dude?

Speaker 36 (01:01:40):
They just exagerated or.

Speaker 14 (01:01:43):
Alcohol?

Speaker 3 (01:01:44):
Are you talking about the white dudes? Okay, my bad.

Speaker 34 (01:01:46):
So here's the Chicago's history is rich in regards to
how the city.

Speaker 36 (01:01:55):
What's segregated now.

Speaker 34 (01:01:58):
Blacks, Pollox, Polish, Irish folk at one point in time
all live in community. But then they were like, oh no,
we're gonna have to no, this this ain't gonna stand.

Speaker 36 (01:02:13):
And so we had division amongst the ranks folks.

Speaker 34 (01:02:19):
Black folks were pushed out to the out west of
the city. You had something forced down to the southern
part of Chicago. And so when we talk about why
it is, well, hell, segregation, lack of resources, this, that
and the third, and then then of course crime. Now

(01:02:41):
when I'm talking about crime, I'm not talking about organized crime,
because I'm not.

Speaker 36 (01:02:44):
Even focused on component his days.

Speaker 34 (01:02:47):
Hell, I'm talking about institutional crime at the city level
aka Blagoyevitch, aka the Daily family, who reigned supreme for
over damnar sixty years in Chicago ago. Those three individuals
alone set Chicago back in a major way. Having said that,

(01:03:08):
I find it interesting how people look over we talk
about Chicago being a very bad place. What hell, you
had a black mayor by the name of Harold Washington
who also has a library smack Dad in the middle
of downtown.

Speaker 36 (01:03:24):
Called the Harold Washington Library.

Speaker 34 (01:03:28):
A lot of us felt like they killed that man
because he was really shaking things up for the community.
And after his death you had some asshole, young prick
white artists do a painting.

Speaker 36 (01:03:44):
You can look this up.

Speaker 34 (01:03:46):
He made a mockery of him, a pain that ended
up in the Art museum that is right downtown off
of Michigan Avenue of Harold Washington in a Brazier now
us Chicago's south side, north side, west side. We wanted blood,

(01:04:07):
but again you also had to contend with the dailies.
So what I'm what I'm driving at, is this all
of these things in regards to we talk about what
may makes these cities really bad.

Speaker 36 (01:04:18):
I would say it's anonymous. Even with Memphis.

Speaker 34 (01:04:20):
You talk about Florida, we could talk about Cali, we
can talk about Texas. Is the same shit as these
goddamn politicians and the corruption that's gone unchecked.

Speaker 36 (01:04:32):
So I mean, I'm glad we're having a conversation.

Speaker 34 (01:04:37):
But because I'm in this room and I lived in
Chicago on born and raised. My people are from Cold Water, Mississippi,
I got a lot to say about Chicago, and so
this chance to rapper as he's made many many or
have many conversations around exactly what we're talking about.

Speaker 23 (01:04:57):
Oh yeah, So, James, if you socially cut, I got
a question for you.

Speaker 6 (01:05:03):
All My family is from Chicago. Who is stack? Don't
kill me.

Speaker 23 (01:05:07):
Gonna get right back to the topic at this Who
is the greatest rapper? You can only pick one in
the history of Chicago.

Speaker 3 (01:05:17):
What mikee on.

Speaker 36 (01:05:18):
James in the history of Chicago.

Speaker 23 (01:05:23):
Really, if you can only pick one and you know
all of them. Somebody said, somebody said Twister.

Speaker 2 (01:05:33):
I think it's Twister as well. I think I'm going
for Twister all day. Legendary O g ship. You know
what I'm saying. I ain't going for Yeah, you're going
for Twister to bro I ain't gonna I'm telling you he.

Speaker 9 (01:05:48):
Good, but like he doesn't have any much that much.

Speaker 18 (01:05:56):
Answer.

Speaker 14 (01:05:57):
Better say comments.

Speaker 3 (01:06:00):
In common and make me go to sleep. You serious?

Speaker 6 (01:06:03):
Hey, Hey, James answered, You better say.

Speaker 9 (01:06:09):
I ain't here.

Speaker 36 (01:06:13):
I'm glad you.

Speaker 34 (01:06:15):
I'm glad you said rapper, because if you were talking
about hip hop, this would be a different conversation. Having
said that, if we're talking about rapper, yeah, Twister would
bubble up to the top. But see, most people forget.
If we're gonna talk about Twister, you'd have to mention
do a Die. You'd have to also say psycho drama.

(01:06:38):
Oh so yeah, Twister definitely definitely there, but we can't.

Speaker 36 (01:06:45):
We can't.

Speaker 34 (01:06:45):
We're gonna include him. Oh, we gotta talk about doing Die.
We definitely gotta talk about psycho drama.

Speaker 23 (01:06:51):
Yeah, because do what not made Twister? That's what that's
where he cut his teeth at. Okay, all right, man,
I'm sorry, I'm starting. I'm sorry, get back, judge.

Speaker 2 (01:07:01):
It is your city making black men look bad. Huh
black bear douw. What's up, mister red ja ja welcome
to the stage.

Speaker 3 (01:07:09):
Three. Let's let's continue this. Did y'all want to continue?
Let's go.

Speaker 14 (01:07:13):
Indiana's not making them look bad?

Speaker 23 (01:07:16):
Because but number three, well, Gary, Indiana is I don't
know what you're talking about.

Speaker 11 (01:07:22):
Get it Indianapolis, you said, Gary, Indianapolis is not making
them mencau.

Speaker 6 (01:07:27):
It's only six, it's only six black men there. Of
course you know that.

Speaker 18 (01:07:31):
I answered the question.

Speaker 22 (01:07:32):
Okay, y'all men run around calling each other Indian animals.

Speaker 11 (01:07:37):
We are not making don't look bad though, That's it.

Speaker 6 (01:07:41):
We're not, that's true.

Speaker 17 (01:07:45):
We're not making.

Speaker 23 (01:07:45):
Them back when we say look bad like stak what's
the criteria for looking bad?

Speaker 3 (01:07:52):
Sagging your motherfucking pan? Damn it, Come on more, I'm
about to wake it up. What we doing? They sagging
their pants? That's the first red flag.

Speaker 11 (01:08:06):
But no, we have a thing in Indiana where you
have conservative poles and then you just have holes for
the men. And it's a lot we're not. God just
answered the question.

Speaker 17 (01:08:18):
They are.

Speaker 6 (01:08:20):
So Stack sagging their pants?

Speaker 23 (01:08:22):
What What's What's what's the second criteria for making black
men look bad? Because I got I got a different
I got a different I got a different set of criteria, Stack,
So I want to see what the criteria is. What's
the consensus? Killing each other? Okay, I can rock with that, Odelio,
I hope I said that right. I don't want no
disrespect for him. So we're talking about black men killing
each other. We're talking about black men bad money management? Okay,

(01:08:46):
all right, Stack, what else you got?

Speaker 6 (01:08:48):
That's it? Just them three?

Speaker 3 (01:08:50):
No, No, we're gonna continue bad.

Speaker 2 (01:08:52):
What else? Hygiene? Let's get into that one. What are
we talking about, Corey, smell like black and miles and
ship Damn we talk talking about damn Yes, smell like
black and miles and not taking care of your hygiene?

Speaker 23 (01:09:04):
Yeah, still got lemon pepper wings up under your.

Speaker 2 (01:09:07):
Head, lemon pepper wings and backwoods residente.

Speaker 3 (01:09:15):
Look?

Speaker 11 (01:09:15):
Or are we talking about what they actually do in
in the community.

Speaker 23 (01:09:19):
So, Rosie, that's a great point, because my one criteria
for making black men look bad, it's a black man
that don't take care of his damn kids. Now, I
want to find those stats out right, because to me,
it's a black man's first responsibility is to take care
of his family, and the Bible says that a man
that don't take care of his kids is worse than
the infidel. So I want to know what city has

(01:09:42):
the most fatherless children. And I'm gonna say that city.
Stack is making black men look bad because I think
black men inherently are great fathers, contrary to what the
media wants to tell us, contrary to popular belief, contrary
to popular beef.

Speaker 22 (01:10:00):
You know, doctor statistics say that we are the best fathers.

Speaker 6 (01:10:04):
That's a fact. Now I agree with that.

Speaker 14 (01:10:12):
Actually they are the best fathers. They're not talking about
the ones that aren't there that are the best fathers.

Speaker 25 (01:10:17):
Just because you're you're physically able to see that or
say that as a study.

Speaker 8 (01:10:20):
That's one thing, But they're not counting the ones that are.

Speaker 6 (01:10:25):
Come up and lead and.

Speaker 23 (01:10:26):
Trying to take no authority and take no praise away
from black men is in the right because.

Speaker 17 (01:10:33):
That's not a majority.

Speaker 14 (01:10:35):
When they're talking about to predominately the black men that make.

Speaker 23 (01:10:37):
You Yeah, I want I want you to cite that
source from me because that what you just did is
the same thing that they did when he talked about
Houston having highest STD.

Speaker 6 (01:10:47):
One thing that I do.

Speaker 14 (01:10:48):
We talked about the.

Speaker 25 (01:10:51):
Cities, right we're talking about specifically, specifically these cities that
make people look bad. If you look at the statistics
off the pover impoverished areas that everyone has been talking about,
and then you talked about the dads that aren't there,
there's more dads that aren't there and those describing than
that are.

Speaker 14 (01:11:06):
So of course the black men that are there going
to look good.

Speaker 37 (01:11:09):
Statistics don't say that.

Speaker 14 (01:11:12):
In poverished areas? Are you just talking.

Speaker 22 (01:11:14):
About as a whole?

Speaker 37 (01:11:16):
They say that we are you you you're talking about
old status.

Speaker 22 (01:11:21):
That's your dad.

Speaker 14 (01:11:23):
No, No, I'm talking about I'm not my dad, definitely not.

Speaker 25 (01:11:26):
That's funny. But I'm talking about in poverished area specifically.
I'm i talking about America as the whole. I'm talking
about the hoods near you that you guys all named.

Speaker 3 (01:11:36):
Houston has the best black men per captain.

Speaker 23 (01:11:40):
Hey, yo, did you hear that stack? What a sound
effects man? Let me get the sound defix.

Speaker 3 (01:11:44):
So that was that?

Speaker 1 (01:11:45):
You know what?

Speaker 23 (01:11:46):
Man shout out to their brother saying, Houston got the
best black men. I'm not even from Houston, but I
rock with Houston. Man, where's ya yay? What happened? You
went quiet on us when that stack came up. It's
a very interesting. It's an interesting Definitely, silence is taking
place right now.

Speaker 6 (01:12:02):
But what else.

Speaker 14 (01:12:03):
Mane with than the Southern men? Don't you?

Speaker 36 (01:12:13):
Dave?

Speaker 3 (01:12:14):
White man?

Speaker 17 (01:12:15):
I dad you, I'm a swhirler.

Speaker 14 (01:12:17):
I guess some clubhouse. I did what I want, but
I and what wants me?

Speaker 9 (01:12:21):
So?

Speaker 14 (01:12:22):
I mean I did what you know, I did everything.

Speaker 17 (01:12:27):
To date whatever race.

Speaker 14 (01:12:28):
Now I have an issue with that?

Speaker 17 (01:12:30):
Do you?

Speaker 3 (01:12:31):
Lolita?

Speaker 23 (01:12:32):
You're a very beautiful woman and you can date what
you want to date. Three, let's not do that bad?

Speaker 6 (01:12:38):
What? What else? What other?

Speaker 23 (01:12:39):
What are the what are the characteristics in these cities
that make black men look bad?

Speaker 6 (01:12:46):
Anybody else? Floor is open?

Speaker 3 (01:12:50):
Gay?

Speaker 6 (01:12:51):
Hey? Yo?

Speaker 23 (01:12:53):
Okay, all right, yep, go ahead.

Speaker 6 (01:13:02):
Let's move right past that one yo?

Speaker 3 (01:13:05):
Who said that? But who said that?

Speaker 17 (01:13:06):
Ship?

Speaker 9 (01:13:07):
Now?

Speaker 3 (01:13:07):
Who said that ship?

Speaker 24 (01:13:08):
Bro?

Speaker 3 (01:13:09):
What's going on? Bro?

Speaker 14 (01:13:11):
Who said that?

Speaker 3 (01:13:14):
The hell you say that? Bro?

Speaker 40 (01:13:16):
I mean, you just look at what's going on the
city is like Atlanta, you know, like was wrong with
what he said New Orleans. You know, you know it's
decimating the black family.

Speaker 22 (01:13:28):
That's what we want, right the aint that what we
want stack. We want to keep procreating it growing.

Speaker 3 (01:13:34):
You're right, You're right.

Speaker 22 (01:13:35):
Yeah, So how is it about?

Speaker 17 (01:13:39):
It?

Speaker 3 (01:13:39):
Ain't nothing bad about it.

Speaker 2 (01:13:40):
I didn't say it was a bad I just wanted
to know who said that so he could stand doing
and we could talk about it.

Speaker 3 (01:13:44):
He can spend the.

Speaker 22 (01:13:45):
Congo for sure. Oh see, that's all you had to say?

Speaker 8 (01:13:50):
Bro about that?

Speaker 3 (01:13:52):
Yeah, I mean, anybody else want to chime in. I
know y'all feeling it.

Speaker 40 (01:13:55):
I know, I know it's controversial, but I just had
to throw it out there.

Speaker 23 (01:13:59):
You know, I don't think listen, man, you I think.
I think, Oh, you got to realize you're in the
room for the niggas that stand on business. I listen,
I am. I am hyper heterosexual, So I feel you, Fam.

Speaker 6 (01:14:12):
I you know it. Listen.

Speaker 23 (01:14:15):
I don't visit Atlanta as much just for that reason,
and I definitely taking my I ain't taking my son
out there, so I'm not I'm not mad at you, Fam.
I'm not mad at you at all. You know, it's
it's real I've seen a nigga in high heels in
the skirt the other day's stack.

Speaker 6 (01:14:28):
That's how, Corey?

Speaker 23 (01:14:30):
What the whole what I was in the airports?

Speaker 3 (01:14:35):
Da damn what Corey?

Speaker 23 (01:14:39):
Your nigga had on the crylic nails in the throw?
You know what I'm saying that? You know, I don't
know what's going.

Speaker 6 (01:14:43):
On out here.

Speaker 9 (01:14:44):
Man.

Speaker 6 (01:14:44):
He was from doctor Albert's neighborhood, and I talked to him.

Speaker 17 (01:14:47):
He knew, he knew, he knew.

Speaker 14 (01:14:49):
Doctor.

Speaker 2 (01:14:55):
That's fucking crazy. Has anyone seen this ship that Corey seen?
Said he's seen a nails and a skirt is going on?

Speaker 3 (01:15:05):
Are you kissing? Hold on acrylic nails?

Speaker 27 (01:15:07):
Skirts?

Speaker 2 (01:15:08):
And then they got so they baddies right now, this.

Speaker 3 (01:15:11):
Is fucking crazy. This is really.

Speaker 2 (01:15:23):
So you're saying, may be having beds with this ship
and having a skirt on the bed.

Speaker 3 (01:15:28):
It's fucking nothing. You can get the whole foods and
see that.

Speaker 2 (01:15:34):
So how does this make the so? How does this
make you feel when you're in these cities? Black men?

Speaker 3 (01:15:39):
Are y'all fucking uncomfortable? It's like, what the fuck is
going on?

Speaker 21 (01:15:41):
Bro?

Speaker 3 (01:15:42):
Like, Like, what's going on? How y'all feeling about when
y'all see this.

Speaker 37 (01:15:45):
Ship, niggas just don't. I don't know, bro, I just
want to see my people do better than that.

Speaker 8 (01:15:54):
Bro.

Speaker 22 (01:15:54):
I feel like that that's associated with degeneracy.

Speaker 37 (01:15:57):
And you know, I know they change the narrative with
that now to where it's not associated with degeneracy, and you.

Speaker 22 (01:16:03):
Know it's accepted now. And that's school. Bro, do what
you want to do. But going out in public like
that and doing all that extra shit that ship not
cool to me.

Speaker 37 (01:16:12):
And like it, like doctor said, or like you said, stack,
they make your city look bad. It may not look
bad to our sisters, and I don't know why, but
it makes us as men look it makes our group
of men look weak as fuck. That we got this
big sector of men that want to be spoken and
I was spoken so loudly, and I don't know I
got a follow with them, Bro. I just feel like,

(01:16:33):
man speak fieve with that ship, bro, or be in
your world with that ship trying to put that on
everybody else.

Speaker 14 (01:16:40):
I have a question with that. Does it bother you more?

Speaker 25 (01:16:42):
At least the black men in the room of the
ones that are out with it are the ones that
a DL both.

Speaker 14 (01:16:47):
I'm curious.

Speaker 23 (01:16:50):
You know, Lalita, Lalaida, I'm gonna be honest with you. Yeah,
I'm like three on this school. Man, I'm not gonna
say both. I'm gonna say the ones is out with
it is flamboyant. And let me tell you why I'm
raising sons and anybody with children. Man, you understand that
the messaging that goes through social media, through TV, it
is impressionable on all of us.

Speaker 6 (01:17:11):
All of us as human beings.

Speaker 23 (01:17:13):
We can be impressed by social by social constructions and
social norms. And the fact that you know, when I
take my son out that I have to explain to
him why this man is dressing like a woman. I
wish it was avoidable, but it's not. As a parent
in twenty twenty five, and so Lalita, I will say,
listen to download nigga is you know, do what you do,

(01:17:33):
but you know it only bothers me, like I said,
because I'm raising sons and I'm raising I'm raising daughters. Lalita,
my daughter, my daughter graduated from a performing arts school
and so in Houston.

Speaker 6 (01:17:46):
I'm sorry, Chris if you're still here, but she.

Speaker 23 (01:17:49):
Graduated from a performing arts school in Houston, Texas called HSPVA.
I went to see her perform and Lalita, no cap
no cap. I'm not joking, all right, these are kids,
so I'm not I'm not demonizing these kids. But the
reality is IVE seen a few little black boys switching
with skirts on full full.

Speaker 6 (01:18:06):
Bus down wigs.

Speaker 23 (01:18:07):
And I made a comment and my daughter almost got
offended because she's been socialized based upon her culture to
accept this, which means I have to I have to
accept it or kind of have these conversations with my
kids because I'm a little bit older on why I
don't feel like it's acceptable. You did what I'm saying,
and so it just it just avoided the conversation when

(01:18:28):
it's download, you did what I'm saying. If you was,
if you was, you know, like my boy just came
in the room. Vance, he's download right Vance, wouldn't I
just jump off.

Speaker 6 (01:18:38):
Hold advanced?

Speaker 3 (01:18:41):
My dog? I got.

Speaker 6 (01:18:42):
I patrolled the every time becoming the room, but you know,
the advances download.

Speaker 25 (01:18:50):
I don't have in here to get her her fact
sheet that she put in the chat before. But the
reason why I asked us, because you were talking about
STDs earlier being a problem in ourmmunity or with some
of the stacks that we said about the black men
that make you know, cities look bad or whatever. And
they're saying that a lot of the d ls are
the ones that are causing this h uproar of or

(01:19:10):
uptick of that situations.

Speaker 3 (01:19:13):
That's hold on, hold on, hold on, say they're causing
the uproar. They're doing all the chaos and knocking the
tables over. Lalita's which you're turning me right now? What
the fuck is going on?

Speaker 25 (01:19:22):
At least from my understanding, she had to figure out
securis online.

Speaker 17 (01:19:26):
But she was.

Speaker 25 (01:19:27):
She actually put you know, the men that are dled,
they they've stuck with women and with men, and so
it's causing an uptick in you know, the SV rates
and those of the men that are are issue in.

Speaker 23 (01:19:40):
Our Communitylita, you know what, and thank you so much, guys.
It just for the record, Vance is not he's not
a downloads he's up top. But anyway, and I'm glad
Vance is here because we just did a segment in
this room a few minutes ago. Detroit was number one
and Philly was number two. Hey, Stack, you want to

(01:20:00):
tell Vance who is a Philadelphia Eagles fan born and
raised in Philly.

Speaker 6 (01:20:04):
What Philly was number two for Stack? You mind telling
them Stack? Stack? You want to tell him what number
two was?

Speaker 23 (01:20:14):
Now, can you tell my guy Vance, what's what Philadelphia
was number two.

Speaker 11 (01:20:21):
In it was for HIV and st I. I want
to talk to the leader after you trow him.

Speaker 28 (01:20:32):
Okay, well, okay.

Speaker 23 (01:20:35):
I'm done trolling, you know, because he always comes in
and talks about me being a cowboy fan.

Speaker 6 (01:20:40):
Kimberly, what's going on, sweetie?

Speaker 23 (01:20:41):
And we just found out through some empirical data provided
by our social media clubhouse statistician that Philadelphia was number
two in the country for h I V S, t I, gonorrhea, herpie, simple,
simphless and uh just nasty, nasty, nasty niggas.

Speaker 6 (01:20:59):
All right, Stack, back to you, brother.

Speaker 3 (01:21:01):
I wanted to who's coming in?

Speaker 2 (01:21:03):
And I want to I want to come in, but
I need you'all to do me a favorite though, real quick,
right ping the room out and share the room out
for me. I'm gonna pst it right back to you,
but ping the room out and share the room out
for more people to come in so they can have
this conversation with me.

Speaker 3 (01:21:15):
Kim just came on stage tie his head Bro, Jay's head.

Speaker 2 (01:21:18):
I want to too, right, and I want to hear
from all you guys, but ping the room out, share
it out so that way we can have this conversation
all as one. Does the city make black men look bad?
What the fuck is going on?

Speaker 1 (01:21:29):
I want to know.

Speaker 2 (01:21:30):
I heard bucking they walking around in skirts. I heard
that fucking doing all type of what the fuck like,
Let's continue to ship over to you and then pass
the mic up.

Speaker 3 (01:21:39):
To somebody else.

Speaker 14 (01:21:40):
Let's continue, okay, so let la I was.

Speaker 25 (01:21:46):
I was curious where you got the stay bro, and
that's why I said I want a pick tans current
in there.

Speaker 9 (01:21:51):
I didn't.

Speaker 14 (01:21:51):
I didn't say it for link, but it.

Speaker 25 (01:21:52):
Was a breakdown and it was pretty much referring to
the fact that you know it's someone is because they
were talking about, you know, the LGBTQ community. If somebody's
out with it, right and we know that bothers people,
you know, it influences our children. Then from a woman,
you can you know, choose not to write. But if
someone's dead and they're using a beard, they get to
followed or someone who oh the fuck women, just so

(01:22:14):
that people don't know that they you know, also fuck men.
Then that's actually cause a problem because now we're spreading
things to people that you know, people actually take you know,
meds to that right, like at least from the you know,
people have heard on here, like people are taking prep
and all the diferent types of things in that community
because they're aware of what you know can happen. But
if it's someone who is DL, who is not letting
a woman knows not outright, you can't tell there's some

(01:22:35):
people on here who have even been exposed to that, right,
that could.

Speaker 11 (01:22:39):
Actually cause an issue in ourselfs because we were just
looking at this in another room. And so what's happening
is it lays dormant longer in the man, but it
shows up faster in the women. So it's actually the
woman that's passing it faster because the man is not

(01:23:07):
telling us. So when the women that are usually having
sex with other women and other men, we're the ones
that are passing it. Although the primary person are the
men that are bisexual, we're doing.

Speaker 17 (01:23:32):
We're the corporate.

Speaker 11 (01:23:35):
Because we're hyper we're hyperchemous more than the man is.

Speaker 14 (01:23:41):
That's sad, It really is.

Speaker 23 (01:23:46):
So no new you saying that these so you I
want to make sure I'm hearing this properly. Are you
saying that it's women with these dirty boxes that's passing
it on to the men and then head blaming it
on the men? And these men are I'm the conglomerate
of cities like Philadelphia, New Orleans, Jersey, Detroit, and so
these cities are not making black men look bad. But

(01:24:09):
it's these women with the dirty boxes. Is that what
I'm hearing? New New or Am I just being toxic
as usual?

Speaker 11 (01:24:14):
Okay, Actually it's both of us, because it's the men
that are bisexual and that's where they're getting it from, right,
But then the women are hypercamus hypergamus and they're passing it.
I might be mispronouncing it. And guys, I've had seizure
medicine and I'll be high in a couple of minutes

(01:24:34):
and I'm gonna stop speaking, I mean totally loaded because
my nurse will come in and give me a treatment.
But I hope you all understand what I'm saying right now.

Speaker 6 (01:24:46):
Looka what you're taking. You're taking di Latin.

Speaker 11 (01:24:51):
Yeah, I just don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:24:53):
So the reason I.

Speaker 23 (01:24:55):
Asked I was being serious. My sister takes di Latin,
so it kind of makes it, you know.

Speaker 17 (01:24:59):
So yeah, okay, so.

Speaker 11 (01:25:00):
I'm on several different meds for seizures, but then I
have a treatment where a nurse comes in and gives
me a treatment for something different.

Speaker 14 (01:25:07):
So are you all following me?

Speaker 11 (01:25:09):
Where you have the bisexual man that comes in with
the woman, and so the woman may have another partner
that is totally heterosexual, so she may have another partner,
and so then you know, may have another partner, and

(01:25:34):
then that man may have another partner. I mean, y'all
know this is this is this is normal. It's no
different than if a man has another.

Speaker 6 (01:25:42):
Partner, especially in Philly.

Speaker 22 (01:25:47):
This basically right.

Speaker 11 (01:25:49):
Yeah, And so somebody put in the chat that they're
not following, but it's fundamental to me. It's fundamental. It's
not like, you know, it's not like you you may
have stopped messing around with one person, but you may
have gotten with another person. I mean, it's fundamental to me.

Speaker 41 (01:26:06):
I have a question for New News. Yeah, okay, if
the problem, well one of the problems is the bisexual man,
why is it that black women and gay men have
formed like this covert alliance and are like leaning into

(01:26:27):
each other right now.

Speaker 11 (01:26:28):
They've made what do you mean as far as friendships, Yeah,
because they as far as friendships are concerned.

Speaker 41 (01:26:36):
Yeah, it seems like there's this like boulet of or
or or these groups of gay men and black women
that are leaning into each other right now.

Speaker 11 (01:26:48):
Okay, So, so imagine having something and just in common
or you may relate to because you know what a
lot of men and are trying to be like a female.
We're talking about we're talking about focus. We're talking about

(01:27:12):
the gay guys trying.

Speaker 6 (01:27:13):
To be like.

Speaker 11 (01:27:20):
We're talking we're talking about the gay guys trying to
be trying to be like the women. Things find common,
you know, finding things in common with the female. You know,
as much as much as gay men want to say
that they are feminine or whatever, gay men or listeners,

(01:27:43):
so females like to talk to them because they listen
as much as they want to say that they are feminine.
Men listen, and women want a man to listen.

Speaker 8 (01:27:59):
They love a man to listen.

Speaker 9 (01:28:02):
Just beds with females.

Speaker 19 (01:28:05):
So I'm gonna say this, I don't I don't know
about this whole this whole idea that gay women, I mean,
gay men and black women are forming alliances. I think
that's why I help some other talking talking them other
social media talking points because you know, like with the.

Speaker 22 (01:28:25):
What are you talking about?

Speaker 14 (01:28:35):
Thanks?

Speaker 19 (01:28:35):
Because I understand this, like y'all, I mean, maybe y'all
saying y'all as part of the world. I'm not gonna
I'm not gonna sit here and take away from your experience, right,
but generally speaking, I don't think so. Like black black,
the gay men are are just as much competition these days.
And if there are alliances formed just to to freaking

(01:28:59):
sniff out some of you undercover niggas that be asking
like y'all are straight but be secretly getting digged down
and behind the scenes like that's that's like.

Speaker 18 (01:29:10):
We we listen.

Speaker 19 (01:29:13):
If if it weren't for gay men, I wouldn't know
anything about how to get a grinder account to see
you guys have these accounts in the neighborhood.

Speaker 17 (01:29:23):
Single challenge and sing the challenge.

Speaker 18 (01:29:26):
Behind the scenes.

Speaker 19 (01:29:27):
I'm just saying, like y'all want to make it seem
like women are like forming alliances with your guys, That's
not always the case. I'm just saying there it may
not what may look like an alliance to you, maybe
a strategic move for that woman. Just just want to
put that out there.

Speaker 17 (01:29:43):
Things can be right.

Speaker 8 (01:29:44):
I agree with you.

Speaker 42 (01:29:46):
Two things can be right to I agree with you.

Speaker 9 (01:29:49):
One you are.

Speaker 22 (01:29:52):
Right, a strategic move with that, with that man or
the gay dude.

Speaker 37 (01:29:57):
It's informative of an alliance though that what are you
talking about?

Speaker 18 (01:30:02):
It's not an aligning.

Speaker 9 (01:30:05):
The wrong way?

Speaker 37 (01:30:06):
In the Democratic Party all the time, y'all voted for
all of their rights.

Speaker 22 (01:30:09):
What are we talking about?

Speaker 8 (01:30:11):
Wrong word?

Speaker 22 (01:30:12):
Wrong words?

Speaker 18 (01:30:14):
Wrong?

Speaker 6 (01:30:16):
So can I say this?

Speaker 9 (01:30:18):
He?

Speaker 1 (01:30:18):
Let me?

Speaker 23 (01:30:19):
Let me say this without the toxicity right and I'm
not saying you toxic, but T let's talk about this. Well, listen,
this is the word I chose them, so tw T
you new listen to me. Let's watch this. Can we
can we be honest? Let me ask you a question.
These are leading questions, but they're questions out of men

(01:30:40):
and women. Who is more supportive of the l g
T p Q. That's it, that's it. Hold on, hold on,
it's just as simple ask for T new of the
of the between men and women, who's more supportive of
that community?

Speaker 18 (01:31:01):
I need the relevance of this question.

Speaker 11 (01:31:03):
I wasn't so yeah, I need more information to I
wasn't it.

Speaker 23 (01:31:08):
It's a simple question who who supports that community more
men and women.

Speaker 18 (01:31:15):
I come from Jamaica, so where we come from.

Speaker 17 (01:31:20):
Yeah, we don't support it.

Speaker 6 (01:31:23):
I'm not talking about Jamaica.

Speaker 8 (01:31:25):
Or it's white to love.

Speaker 14 (01:31:28):
It's not just black.

Speaker 6 (01:31:30):
But I did I.

Speaker 18 (01:31:34):
Ask women.

Speaker 22 (01:31:37):
Thank you to go ahead.

Speaker 18 (01:31:38):
Now, what's what's the what was the point of you
asking that question?

Speaker 23 (01:31:41):
The point is is it may be listen, truth does
not need agreement, right but and it's still the truth.
But the truth is it was It's been women to
support you just being who you want to be. It's
been women who supports this, this movie more. And it's okay.
I'm not saying that. I'm not saying it's right, wrong,
or indifferent. But when we talk about when when somebody

(01:32:03):
says a very provocative statement like three, the reality is
it may not be very digestible, but it is the truth.

Speaker 6 (01:32:09):
Women do support this movement more than men.

Speaker 3 (01:32:11):
Women.

Speaker 19 (01:32:11):
Right now, I have a question for you, fellas of
men and women who are contributing more men or women
to the the LGBT. Uh yeah, community by way of
maybe either turning them out or asking for those queer experiences,

(01:32:34):
i e.

Speaker 18 (01:32:34):
Threesomes and whatever have you.

Speaker 6 (01:32:38):
Yeah, I don't have the empirical debt on it.

Speaker 18 (01:32:40):
Yeah, oh right.

Speaker 3 (01:32:42):
Listen, listen, listen, listen.

Speaker 2 (01:32:46):
This is what I want to No, no, we were
having a good conversation, but I want you to ping
the room out more, don't you want.

Speaker 3 (01:32:51):
I want to have this.

Speaker 2 (01:32:51):
Conversation with more people, and I want you to keep
the room rocket. Tea's coming in. They shaking the table
of Corey shaking the table up definitely right now. And
I want everybody to chime into the conversation. But I
also want everybody to fucking ping the room up and
share the room up for me as well. We ain't
gonna just see here, and y'all ain't gonna help me
get more people to come through. Talk about the conversation, right,

(01:33:14):
make sure y'all tap in how people come through to
the conversation.

Speaker 3 (01:33:18):
The floor is open. Let's continue this ship before I
do another reset soon.

Speaker 11 (01:33:22):
Yeah, you're right, it is. It is the hetero sexual man,
and we could if somebody could take the time to
look at that before we ping in a gay person,
they'll be the ones to say that I'm always in
a room with a good guy that and it's usually

(01:33:46):
the married.

Speaker 23 (01:33:47):
You're feeling real good right now that you knew you.

Speaker 11 (01:33:50):
Yeah, I don't have any I don't have any gay friends.
Proximity matters. I mean it really does. I can say that,
and I promise it's been that way, you know, for years.

Speaker 23 (01:34:14):
But I got a couple of gay friends, A few
of my gay friends in the room right now. Bama
bell La la uh wow.

Speaker 6 (01:34:24):
You got him on up.

Speaker 19 (01:34:26):
Hold on careful with Dymonds like shout out Hannah, his
beautiful wife.

Speaker 6 (01:34:33):
I'm always.

Speaker 3 (01:34:36):
You hear this ship about.

Speaker 6 (01:34:39):
La one.

Speaker 3 (01:34:41):
You guys are fucking crazy.

Speaker 1 (01:34:43):
Bro?

Speaker 3 (01:34:43):
What is wrong with y'all?

Speaker 9 (01:34:45):
Bro?

Speaker 3 (01:34:45):
Y'all do y'all hear what's going on?

Speaker 36 (01:34:47):
Right now?

Speaker 3 (01:34:47):
Can I get a ping session real quick? For like
one minute? Please? Can I get a ping session? Everybody?
Pop in, let's go if you want to stage ping
up for me, let's.

Speaker 27 (01:34:55):
Go in alle what's a Black Grand National original?

Speaker 6 (01:35:00):
When they end, it's not enough.

Speaker 43 (01:35:03):
You selling niggas lists, but it's not enough. Few bases
that a reach stuff, but it's not enough. Say you
bigger than myself, but it's not enoughing I get.

Speaker 9 (01:35:10):
On their ass.

Speaker 27 (01:35:11):
Yeah, somebody's got a door.

Speaker 1 (01:35:12):
I mave the niggas.

Speaker 21 (01:35:14):
Nobody got a joy.

Speaker 27 (01:35:15):
I say, gee ad wash a nigga doy.

Speaker 8 (01:35:17):
We survived outside all from the music.

Speaker 6 (01:35:19):
Nigga, what.

Speaker 9 (01:35:24):
This love? This is not his own, It is a revelation.
How to get a niggle gone?

Speaker 1 (01:35:29):
This is you a man?

Speaker 9 (01:35:30):
Bobby.

Speaker 27 (01:35:31):
I don't want this man, Babby pail bill and make
you fil to tell that like I can't baby, teach
you something unique. Correction, that's the playing baby, don't want
your life is well nigga's hands.

Speaker 43 (01:35:39):
Baby, it's not enough selling niggas list but it's not enough.
You visits at a reach, but it's not enough. Say
you bigger than myself, but it's not enoughing I get.

Speaker 44 (01:35:49):
On their ass.

Speaker 27 (01:35:49):
Yeah, somebody gotta do it. I mean niggas mad ibody
got a door? I say, jee's as washing nigga joy.

Speaker 43 (01:35:56):
We survived outside all from the music.

Speaker 17 (01:35:58):
Nigga?

Speaker 8 (01:35:58):
What turn TV?

Speaker 45 (01:36:01):
Damn?

Speaker 3 (01:36:03):
What the funk we're doing?

Speaker 2 (01:36:04):
It's your city making black men look horrible. Y'all see me, y'all,
y'all got ping more people in here, get some more
ping the room. I'll share the room and then mads
bring people up. If y'all see people y'all know, so
we can chime into the shoes.

Speaker 8 (01:36:18):
Stuck.

Speaker 6 (01:36:18):
I got a question. Manute City is talking about black.

Speaker 40 (01:36:22):
Ship.

Speaker 3 (01:36:23):
Oh my, I'm gonna have to do a party.

Speaker 9 (01:36:28):
A part.

Speaker 17 (01:36:29):
Yeah.

Speaker 18 (01:36:30):
I thought we were talking about the men today.

Speaker 23 (01:36:32):
But okay, yeah, but you know, t I only did
that potentially. You know, if you want to get the
room up, you got to have a gender war. Then
all the all the all the you know, colors to
come in.

Speaker 6 (01:36:43):
But going that, you got it.

Speaker 9 (01:36:46):
Bro.

Speaker 23 (01:36:46):
See he goes back to cap What I say, I
say something about black women. He came back to camp.
I'm telling you you about just say black women.

Speaker 3 (01:36:53):
That's all you got to do is get people in, bro,
say black women, and they're.

Speaker 13 (01:36:56):
All gonna come here.

Speaker 3 (01:36:59):
Donkey listen.

Speaker 2 (01:37:02):
I think we came to the conclusion that it's certain cities,
all right. You ever went to a city and just
been like, damn, I'm never moving here because it makes
the black people look bad. Have have you ever had
that experience? Quarry James, Yay, anybody on the goddamn stage.
Have y'all had that experience where you're like, yo, I'm

(01:37:23):
this is just the place I'm not.

Speaker 3 (01:37:25):
Going to move to because you make our people look sucky.
What's up.

Speaker 44 (01:37:34):
Right now where it makes black man look bad? I'm
in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Speaker 2 (01:37:39):
This is great, So tell us what's tell us your
experience from that? Trish, can you please tell us a
little bit of what's going on out there and what's
some red flags you're seeing that's making black folks look
bad out there?

Speaker 44 (01:37:52):
It's just a lot of pandering, Like y'all talk about
pandering on this app, and most times on this app,
it's just trying to get another person's for pspective.

Speaker 18 (01:38:00):
It ain't really.

Speaker 44 (01:38:01):
Pandering like that, or maybe it's you know, you really
just don't understand, you know, which is fine, But in
real life it just gives to the point where like
it's no substance within you know him, like it's just
all about her, like and he's okay with you know,
it's just being.

Speaker 14 (01:38:16):
All about her, you know.

Speaker 44 (01:38:18):
And yeah, most women up here, they'll get used to
it or numb to it, but then it becomes like
it's like what else is there?

Speaker 11 (01:38:26):
You know?

Speaker 44 (01:38:27):
So now you know, it's affecting the women to where
they ain't even really dating.

Speaker 14 (01:38:32):
They not they not out here.

Speaker 44 (01:38:34):
They get into the bag up here, like, so it's
just all bad.

Speaker 2 (01:38:40):
So they putting the money first, and they ain't even
worried about the men.

Speaker 3 (01:38:43):
That's how bad it is.

Speaker 2 (01:38:44):
None of the men are stepping up and trying to
be leaders and lead to women and.

Speaker 3 (01:38:48):
Create and do these things. What's going on, Trishan, Shit's
crazy the fuck?

Speaker 20 (01:38:53):
I mean?

Speaker 18 (01:38:53):
Yeah, oh no, man for some people.

Speaker 44 (01:38:56):
But yeah, like it's just it's nothing that's being tooken
serious for real. Most most of the games people play
up here, it's just for fun, like play a game
one time, and so you don't want to play no more.
That's that's just, that's just what it is.

Speaker 23 (01:39:15):
And I got tris, I got two brothers and three
nephews that live in Minneapolis, and them niggas is trash.

Speaker 6 (01:39:23):
So I agree with you. I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry.

Speaker 2 (01:39:26):
They are Corey.

Speaker 3 (01:39:33):
How many Yeah you hate how many brothers?

Speaker 6 (01:39:37):
Yeah? Yeah? Yah, I need you to get out the way. Yeah, okay,
my father had eighteen kids.

Speaker 23 (01:39:41):
Yeah, my father had eighteen trills and yeah, okay, and
this is not about me, but I wanted to say tricks.
I agree with you, Okay, I didn't need that sound effect. Yeah, Okay,
all right, but the rest of peace for my father. Listen,
Papa was a rolling stone and the apple do fall
from from the tricker, I mean, thank God for the plan,
b yo.

Speaker 6 (01:40:07):
Anyway, Tris, I agree with.

Speaker 3 (01:40:08):
You, Trish, Trish.

Speaker 2 (01:40:13):
I love your submission, Trish, because it's like you'll really
get the This is a black woman on stage right
and she's telling you what is happening in these cities.

Speaker 3 (01:40:21):
So I love this.

Speaker 2 (01:40:22):
I love the you know, your perspective, you know, is
anything else you want to add on top of that?

Speaker 21 (01:40:27):
Early?

Speaker 2 (01:40:28):
Did you hear me earlier talking about the sagging pants?
How do you feel about that? Okay, yeah, I said
that makes some of the cities look bad.

Speaker 3 (01:40:35):
How do you feel about that? You want to talk
about that?

Speaker 18 (01:40:36):
They sag here?

Speaker 3 (01:40:38):
Like is it bad? It looks bad?

Speaker 15 (01:40:41):
Bad?

Speaker 44 (01:40:42):
It is bad, especially over south now ever since George
Floyd south Side is way like even if you can
compare north Side south Side to Saint Paul east Side,
what like, it's all the same, but it's way worse
south Side. They sag and it's it's just not a
good representation for real, for real, and there's so many

(01:41:04):
resources in Minnesota, Like if you really ast somebody in Minnesota.

Speaker 14 (01:41:08):
There's toomid any resources.

Speaker 44 (01:41:11):
For you to not have, you know, or feel like
you just can't do it. Minnesota is a money state.
I would say that, but people don't just put the
effort towards it.

Speaker 6 (01:41:24):
It's a money state.

Speaker 23 (01:41:25):
They settled, so a tris it's a money stake because
most of the folks from Chicago moved and get the
benefits Minnesota has been.

Speaker 16 (01:41:36):
Ding.

Speaker 1 (01:41:37):
James.

Speaker 23 (01:41:38):
James, Oh, most people and James in my line, Hey, listen,
hold on, hold on, I want to go to James.
But let me let me, let me, let me quantify
the statement. James, I'm born and raised in Chicago. I
got about twenty family members that moved to Minneapolis and St.

Speaker 6 (01:41:53):
And Saint Paul.

Speaker 23 (01:41:55):
Every last one of them said they went there because
the benefits that the city that the state of Minnesota
gives is almost twice as what Illinois gives. And I'm
just telling you what I've heard, James.

Speaker 34 (01:42:06):
Okay, so let me ask you this question. Your relatives,
your cousins, your nephews. These folks got rap sheets.

Speaker 6 (01:42:14):
Yeah, they from from James. We're from Harvings.

Speaker 34 (01:42:17):
So so hold on. So this is why I asked
the question. So your first insertion might be a matter
of coincidence, but that's not the reason why folks from
a certain part of Chicago move up here. Those folks
move up here because they're avoiding their warrants, the tickets, victions, this, that,

(01:42:41):
and the third.

Speaker 6 (01:42:42):
Okay, okay with you, I'm tracking you.

Speaker 34 (01:42:45):
There's one other thing, the snow bunnies that's gonna put
them up because they ain't got the cajonies to go
out here and get it them.

Speaker 23 (01:42:52):
Shout out to the snow bunnies. If it ain't snowing,
I ain't going.

Speaker 14 (01:42:57):
And that's the reason why crimes, the fact them.

Speaker 37 (01:43:01):
Why Chicago, Holy smoked somebody and more lord to Minnesota.

Speaker 34 (01:43:05):
So that accounts for one thousand, one thousand of the
individuals that live in Chicago. It's a very small percentage
folks that come up to Minnesota in harbor out because
here's the thing, what ends up happening by the year

(01:43:27):
ten out of here. See the transportation system, public transportation
system in Minneapolis's trash.

Speaker 36 (01:43:36):
They used to Chicago, so this ain't gonna do it
for him. Plus it's too damn cold. They'll be gone
in ten years.

Speaker 6 (01:43:43):
Hey, James, you know where they coming to?

Speaker 23 (01:43:45):
James, And listen, a trist let me say this real quick,
A stack a stack. You know, I recently just moved
to Scottsdale, Arizona. That's where I'm at right now, and
we're talking about cities to make black men look back. Now, listen, man,
I remember when Hurricane Katrina took place and unfortunately a
lot of people had to be relocated from New Orleans.

Speaker 6 (01:44:04):
Every city them niggas went to got worse.

Speaker 11 (01:44:06):
Uh.

Speaker 23 (01:44:07):
And that's just a fact, all right. And if you know,
you know. But let me tell you something bro uh.
Out here in Phoenix, Arizona, we have a lot of
people from the Midwest. Chicago and Minnesota are the top
two places that black people are moving from to come
to Arizona. Those are well, let me let me. I'm
not gonna say the top two. I'm saying the black

(01:44:29):
people that are here, most of them are coming from
those areas. The crime rates going up stack. I'm just
saying the crime rate is going up stack. And so
I think that that I think that some of the
grimiest men in America come from the Midwest, Detroit, Chicago, Minnesota.
Saint Louis, East Saint Louis and Gary, Indiana, Gary, Indiana.

Speaker 6 (01:44:52):
Stack.

Speaker 23 (01:44:52):
I think I think we I think we talk about
New Orleans, Jersey and New York, but I think it's
these other cities, these Midwest rhyme.

Speaker 6 (01:45:01):
You know, Lat's key, kids.

Speaker 23 (01:45:02):
The daddy wasn't around wearing drids listening to twist the
coming of these other predominant cities, you know, and messing
it up for us.

Speaker 6 (01:45:10):
What you think about that Stack, Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:45:13):
I think it was different people coming from different cities
to make it look horrible. Because if you came from somewhere, right,
if you came from somewhere that had respectable people around
the environment, and when you go into another environment, you're
gonna know how to structure that environment. So I understand
where you're coming from, Corey. It's like where you coming from,
where you going, Like if you're going into another city
and you coming from some bullshit or you coming from

(01:45:35):
that and you ain't even looking for a better life
and you want to begin, you want to and you're
just going to cause destruction anywhere you go. That's why
I said, Yo, what is going on right, Corey? So
it's it's just what it is. Bro, that's what I see.
It's the different cities, right, and then you mess it
with another city and then you going to another city
just to fuck that city up. It's like you didn't
even bring you didn't even contribute to that city. You

(01:45:56):
just brought more chaos to the city. You didn't even
try to you know, would you do the community, did
you try to lead something, did you try to build
something there? So, yeah, Corey, they're just coming from different
cities and doing the same funk shit they was doing
in their city and then transferring that energy to another
city and fucking the whole city up.

Speaker 6 (01:46:11):
So you know, I live in the Beverly Hills of
the Phoenix here. So I'm Scott.

Speaker 23 (01:46:15):
I'm in Scottsdale, and I was talking to a couple
of couple of brothers at the cigarette lounge and they was,
I'm looking to buy house and they said, make sure
you stay East Valley and I said, why can't I
go West Valley? They said, because that's where most of
the people from Chicago, Minnesota, Saint Louis. They're moving to
the East Valley. And they said, I'm sorry to the

(01:46:35):
West Valley. They said, make sure you stay East valley.
That's a problem, Stacked. It's a problem. It's unfortunate, but
it's a problem. But real, I mean, Arizona's a good
place to live, Bro, really, No.

Speaker 2 (01:46:46):
Of course I've been. I've been out there. I had,
I had done business in Arizona. Bro, I know what
it is out there is fire out there.

Speaker 3 (01:46:52):
I like.

Speaker 2 (01:46:52):
I like the scenery of like the desert where they lived,
like how they got the cribson the desert and everything
is just like look and you're gonna it's like they
got hills that go all the way up to the
crib in the desert, which is nuts. So Corey already
know where you ask fire.

Speaker 9 (01:47:06):
Bro.

Speaker 2 (01:47:06):
I ain't been out there a couple of times doing business.
And you know when we did business. That's the fact
that I was out there that has said you was
out there doing your things doing anytime be trying. I know,
Corey be coming over here and talking ship. But that's
my dog in real life, you heard. So let's get
it in James over to you.

Speaker 17 (01:47:21):
Now.

Speaker 34 (01:47:21):
I was saying, doctor Heim, these these these statue keep
throwing out while as they might have some evidence to them,
it's lacking the depth.

Speaker 36 (01:47:32):
Let's look at.

Speaker 6 (01:47:34):
This nigga just called me shallow, snack.

Speaker 23 (01:47:36):
I just want I want to make sure. I just
want to make sure. The James just called me shallow.
First of all, you talked about Lebron James, and now
the nigga just called me shallow.

Speaker 6 (01:47:44):
That's crazy.

Speaker 34 (01:47:46):
It's lacking the additional detail. So these parts when you
called out Chicago, Oh, by the way, shout out to
Mike App, Mike Apps buying back the block Forest Park, Illinois.
Shout out to him by this entire community back. But anyway,
all of these cities that you're talking about that are

(01:48:06):
heading down south, whether it be Arizona, Texas, Atlanta, what
are these places that they're running from a flee from
outside of the things I spoke of, what what is
the one thing those cities.

Speaker 36 (01:48:21):
Have in common.

Speaker 23 (01:48:24):
I think it's you know, I've talked to a lot
of people from the Shah and all of them said
they leaving the cold weather. Okay, that's that's like the
consensus that I get from a lot of guys out here.

Speaker 36 (01:48:35):
Let me help you out. It's the taxes. It's the taxes.

Speaker 34 (01:48:42):
Folks are being priced out of the places that they
grew up in. Now I didn't you know, I kind
of touched on the things that have been going on
in Chicago.

Speaker 36 (01:48:51):
But the fact of the matter is, in some.

Speaker 34 (01:48:54):
Parts of Chicago, folks are paying anywhere from ten thousand,
twelve to twenty three K a year for their home taxes,
property taxes, and coming into the city gonna cast you
a bag because they're taxing you on those tolls. The

(01:49:17):
CTA has gone up since my college year is by
at least two and.

Speaker 36 (01:49:21):
A half dollars.

Speaker 34 (01:49:24):
You do the math. It's the taxes on top of
the depreciating income. The food deserts have gotten worse, all
the things, government work has been laid off.

Speaker 36 (01:49:38):
This is why we have what we have.

Speaker 34 (01:49:41):
But this migration is nothing new, because this has been
a thing. It's cyclical. It happens every twenty five to
thirty years. We just happen to be in the middle
of that right now. But again, these things aren't just circumstantial.
There's a lot of things that are happening that are occurrent,
that are occurring, that are forcing people to find new

(01:50:05):
safe havings elsewhere.

Speaker 36 (01:50:08):
Now, let's not act like Arizona.

Speaker 34 (01:50:13):
Isn't racist, havn't said that people are going down there,
and it ain't for the It ain't for the weather.

Speaker 6 (01:50:20):
Even I can tell you that, you know.

Speaker 23 (01:50:23):
You know, James, I've heard that, and I'm I'm keeping
it a being with you, bro, I've I've heard that,
but because I'm inside most of the time, I don't
see it. I'm not I'm not saying I'm oblivious to it.
I've heard that the Phoenix Police station is one of
the most corrupt police stations, and I mean police forces
in the country.

Speaker 9 (01:50:42):
Uh.

Speaker 6 (01:50:43):
I just haven't experienced that.

Speaker 23 (01:50:45):
Uh. And it could be because of proximity where I
live and where where I frequent, but I'm I'm sure
that's the case. You know, Arizona has predominantly always been
a a white state, and especially in the Phoenix area,
but with more the last start I looked at, I
think it was like six point five to seven percent
and growing of African Americans migrating here, and most of

(01:51:07):
them migrating from the Midwest, James, most of them niggas
coming from Chicago. Ain't got no property test cause they
wouldn't own enough. Hello, that's not true, right, okay, alright,
but you you right, you Okay. That was a little
prevocative Yeah, cause.

Speaker 36 (01:51:20):
Y you you spoke of Harvey.

Speaker 34 (01:51:22):
You know what I'm saying this Dalton again, this may
would there's a whole bunch of different areas in Chicago
where people have literally lost their homes in a fleet.

Speaker 23 (01:51:33):
Har Hey, James Harvey is horrible. It's almost a ghost
time bro.

Speaker 34 (01:51:38):
Yeah, so it's interesting. So is Chicago Heights. As you know,
there's East Heights, Ford Heights. Hell, if I was gonna
say anything, at one point in time, Ford Heights was
probably one of the dangerous places you can be in Chicago.
That's the one city where they caught up to a
crooked cop. They tied onto a back of a Chevy,

(01:52:05):
drove down Lincoln.

Speaker 36 (01:52:07):
Avenue with him on fire. So yeah, that happened. But
he had it coming. No, he was of the other
Hughe he would step away out of line. So they
have to take care of that.

Speaker 34 (01:52:22):
This is why they know not to come come their
asses down to the South Side when under the nonsense
we saw in twenty twenty, because they already know what
time it is.

Speaker 36 (01:52:29):
Oh you come down there, you ain't coming back. That's
in city.

Speaker 23 (01:52:34):
So yeah, that's why when I go to the shot,
I'm in and out. But what about you know what
shout out to Maya with the red dress, North Carolina, Charlotte,
Roley Durham. I think those are some cities that make
black man look pretty good.

Speaker 6 (01:52:50):
What do y'all think about that? I love? I love Charlotte, man,
I love North Carolina.

Speaker 35 (01:52:55):
Man, niggas you crazy nigga on front of Carolina's off
for a sack car line? Not really no Carolina, but
I always be in North Carolina. Man, nigga, is you
crazy nigga? But I don't think black men look good, No,
damn will not even in the motherfucking church. Honestly speaking.
That's why I really had to keep my mouth closed
because y'all boys ain't said nothing about Carolina. I was like,
all right, maybe they ain't gonna say nothing, but now,

(01:53:17):
hell no, Carolina is horrible, horrible.

Speaker 6 (01:53:21):
So good afternoon, Maya, Maya. What what do you think
about that statement?

Speaker 1 (01:53:26):
Maya?

Speaker 18 (01:53:27):
So here's what I will say.

Speaker 20 (01:53:30):
I'm not sure where that young man is from in
the quote unquote Carolinas. I think he specifically said South
Carolina as he throws his gang signs up.

Speaker 18 (01:53:41):
Yeah, so people.

Speaker 20 (01:53:43):
In Charlotte and Raleigh and Wilmington and certain areas in
North Carolina. We avoid certain people that like throw gang
signs up like that. I will say in Charlotte, the
median income for black families is three hundred thousand dollars.
Median income for black families, it's three hundred thousand dollars.

(01:54:04):
They have just I think invested a ten billion dollar
either ten million, ten billion.

Speaker 18 (01:54:10):
I'm just coming off vacation.

Speaker 14 (01:54:14):
Tech AI.

Speaker 35 (01:54:17):
So over all, right, overall the black men inside inside
south side North Carolina.

Speaker 23 (01:54:23):
Oh, don't make hold on, make oldn't make let him finish.
Fam let him finish. We're gonna go right to you
next the Battle of the Carolinas. But Mike, I did
see how you said you avoid me it throw gang signs.
That was pretty good. Goo aybody.

Speaker 20 (01:54:36):
So Amazon is building I believe a ten billion dollar
robotics AI facility in what's called Richmond County, which is
right outside it's east of Charlotte. You have your biotechnology,
which is gonna be your pharmaceutical companies. Most of their
headquarters North American headquarters are located in the Raleigh Durham area.

(01:54:59):
Hence that why they call it Research Triangle Park. You
also have your banking headquarters in Charlotte, North Carolina. So
when I talk about the medium black family income specifically
in Charlotte being three hundred thousand dollars, that's not an
exaggeration but.

Speaker 13 (01:55:16):
A number on this because I know you line, she's lying.

Speaker 14 (01:55:20):
No, she's not.

Speaker 17 (01:55:23):
Well.

Speaker 23 (01:55:23):
I wasn't will make Let's let's let her finish, let
her finish, man, let her finish after the sign.

Speaker 6 (01:55:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 23 (01:55:32):
One thing about Maya is uh as she's in law
school and doing extremely well.

Speaker 18 (01:55:36):
So I don't think that she's.

Speaker 6 (01:55:38):
Trying to get in.

Speaker 3 (01:55:38):
I don't.

Speaker 6 (01:55:39):
I don't think that she would lie, brother, but go ahead.

Speaker 20 (01:55:41):
So with that being said, there's also a black hub
for cyber technology that specifically geared toward black people in
tech being built in Charlotte. So yes, Charlotte raw even Wilmington.
The cost of living in Wilmington, North Carolina is increasing.

(01:56:06):
Charlotte butts up to a city called rock Hill, South Carolina.
They actually share a border. If you go to the
amusement park in Carolins, you're standing in North in South
Carolina at the same time. So these things are possible
because people are moving here and thriving.

Speaker 35 (01:56:25):
Tell now, cause this shit really irked my nerve when
I'm hearing this, especially when I'm hearing the places like
that I know is horrible. Like, first thing, First, my
little brother, he's nineteen years old right now. His birthday's March.
This nigga just got shot seven times inside this same
rock hill that she just tried to mention to people.

(01:56:48):
He got shot seven times down there, you know, And
that was about twenty five year olds and thirty year
olds that did this to a child.

Speaker 13 (01:56:55):
You know, this happened inside rock Hill again, North Carolina.

Speaker 35 (01:57:00):
I don't know why that little crazy ass statement that
the medium income for black families inside North Carolina's three
hundred k. Trust me, if that was the case, y'all
would have heard about this shit on the fucking news someplace.

Speaker 13 (01:57:12):
That was bullshit. This shit is motherfucking god damn.

Speaker 8 (01:57:16):
Like, what is it like fifty K?

Speaker 12 (01:57:17):
Sixty K?

Speaker 35 (01:57:19):
Maybe if you got two people in the household, I
think that's maybe eighty K, and that's it's still not
even that you feel me like, y'all know what the
fucking medium income is anywhere? It does not change inside
North Carolina. Trust me, it never did that. North Carolina
is is nothing special about the Carolina's at all. Yeah,
I see about sixty I mean, yeah, sixty eight, K Yeah,

(01:57:41):
that seems about reasonable. I don't know where the fuck
she got that crazy ass number from. Yeah, this shit
is the country. This shit is the country. Again, this
is the country. Unless y'all like the country, don't come
out here. Ain't shit out here but a whole bunch
of dirty country niggas, And we're gonna come talk our
geechee shit to y'all. Y'all might not understand if the

(01:58:02):
North Carolina they be acting a little bit more proper
and ship like that, but that's.

Speaker 13 (01:58:05):
Still my cousins and ship.

Speaker 21 (01:58:07):
I don't really like my cousins.

Speaker 35 (01:58:08):
They be pissing me off, acting like they ain't like
just as ghetto as us, but they definitely are.

Speaker 13 (01:58:13):
Why would you do that?

Speaker 23 (01:58:15):
Okay, So so hold on, hold on, no, no, hold on, no, no, no, no, yeah, no, no,
give me one second. So I just so, mister make
and Cameron, I agree with you all, but listening is fundamental.
And what she said, if I'm correct me, if I'm wrong,
maya she said for families in tech. I think that's

(01:58:37):
exactly what she said.

Speaker 6 (01:58:37):
And I went and I did a little dusty income.

Speaker 13 (01:58:40):
That's what she said.

Speaker 23 (01:58:41):
Okay, Okay, Well I thought I heard her say tech.
Did you say tech mentioned text.

Speaker 6 (01:58:45):
Maya old text?

Speaker 17 (01:58:46):
She did?

Speaker 14 (01:58:47):
And she also she also mentioned she mentioned those things.

Speaker 6 (01:58:51):
Right, So so I just I just I just did it.

Speaker 23 (01:58:54):
I just did a quick search rights, real quick and
it said in North Carolina for dual tech earners, uh
come by income estimates between one hundred and eighty two
hundred and sixteen thousand four.

Speaker 1 (01:59:05):
So I know what she was talking about.

Speaker 14 (01:59:07):
So can I go to it?

Speaker 6 (01:59:09):
Okay, go ahead, Okay.

Speaker 11 (01:59:10):
So I own property in Lyllington, North Carolina. I was
living there and I was working in pharma. There's also
a farmer hub that is in a small city close

(01:59:31):
to Lyllington, and Lillington is about twenty minutes away from
Fort Bragg.

Speaker 20 (01:59:40):
It's called Wilmington. You're you're thinking of Wilmington, North Carolina,
which again.

Speaker 14 (01:59:44):
I did mention, no Lyllington.

Speaker 42 (01:59:47):
L I you're saying the city near Lillington.

Speaker 20 (01:59:51):
I'm telling you the city near Lillington is Wilmington, North Carolina.
That's where PPD it has its Global North American Headquarters,
now Global North American Headquarters.

Speaker 11 (02:00:04):
Okay, you're right, but so is this other farmer hub
that's about thirty minutes away. I just can't remember the
other one, but you're correct. But there's another small form
of hub that's about thirty minutes away from there. But
I worked for PPD outside of my home and from
and PPD is in Riley and it's also in Durham.

Speaker 18 (02:00:31):
But you're correct.

Speaker 20 (02:00:33):
Yeah, my mom worked from PPD Global in Wilmington. That's
why that's where they built their headquarters.

Speaker 18 (02:00:38):
That's where I know where it is.

Speaker 11 (02:00:41):
So it depends on the type of company that you work.

Speaker 3 (02:00:45):
I'm sorry, I know.

Speaker 23 (02:00:45):
If I'm a if what what city in North Carolina
can I go to to to plant an effective and
successful pimping business?

Speaker 11 (02:00:56):
Yeah, I wouldn't know.

Speaker 20 (02:00:57):
It would be anywhere in South Carolina, anywhere North Carolina.

Speaker 13 (02:01:03):
Look at that, you see you see that in with Carolina.

Speaker 11 (02:01:10):
So I'm going to say this, if you were in Lellington,
North Carolina, and you were not working in pharma in Lellington,
there's no way that you could make it at all
unless you were making I mean just no way. There's
not much that they're paying more than like thirteen dollars

(02:01:32):
an hour.

Speaker 23 (02:01:35):
New, new, new new, And Maya, what's which Which Carolina
is more ghetto?

Speaker 6 (02:01:38):
North or South?

Speaker 20 (02:01:41):
I want to say, I mean, sorry, doctor Heimothy, that
would be South.

Speaker 6 (02:01:50):
You would have did this that you a gender war,
get a Carolina war going on?

Speaker 9 (02:01:55):
Stack.

Speaker 11 (02:01:56):
I agree with you, Maya, it would be South.

Speaker 20 (02:01:59):
So and to be fair, to be fair, when I
do mention that South Carolina is a little more I
wouldn't even call it ghetto.

Speaker 18 (02:02:09):
I would call it more rural.

Speaker 14 (02:02:11):
Right, So you're going to have poor, very.

Speaker 20 (02:02:15):
Yes, very low income socio economically. The only major is educated,
less educated. Major industry is going to be Myrtle Beach,
South Carolina. Largest tourism Hilton Head, South Carolina. And that's yeah,
from South Carolina. Those are going to be your tourist.

Speaker 23 (02:02:35):
Maya Wi may witch of the Carolinas has more baby
mamas north to South.

Speaker 22 (02:02:41):
I'm gonna go with South Carolina.

Speaker 6 (02:02:44):
I don't know, drama going up.

Speaker 8 (02:02:52):
I will take that.

Speaker 20 (02:02:55):
Could potentially have more baby mamas because guess what, there
are more people in North Carolina than South Carolina.

Speaker 14 (02:03:03):
So I would I.

Speaker 20 (02:03:03):
Would can see that point in say, North Carolina probably
has more baby mamas, but I would also probably bet
that North Carolina has way less baby mamas than South Carolina.
There you're gonna find more Marria.

Speaker 18 (02:03:19):
Yes, can I say?

Speaker 11 (02:03:20):
Can I say?

Speaker 6 (02:03:22):
Arico? We got to going up in Rico, Come on
join the stage. He Rico.

Speaker 23 (02:03:27):
We couldn't get a gender war, but we got a
Carolina war going on.

Speaker 6 (02:03:30):
Rico, let's go.

Speaker 11 (02:03:32):
So let me say that where my property is is
where my dad was born, and he is one of fourteen.
So I'm gonna say at that end of North Carolina,
it is it's not that many people, and they're building
up that area. At the Raleigh Durham End, it's more.

(02:03:58):
I mean, it's more tech is more. What is it
that she just said? It's more technology and everything? So
one of can he please be quiet?

Speaker 17 (02:04:15):
Please?

Speaker 18 (02:04:16):
Can you all please mute him?

Speaker 23 (02:04:19):
So when I miss I missed, no, no, I want
to mute him. But he's throwing up gang signs and
he's from South Carolina. Shout out, he stack, shout out
to the gang signs.

Speaker 3 (02:04:28):
And the PTR because when.

Speaker 8 (02:04:33):
I get it, we need.

Speaker 23 (02:04:35):
Make do me a favorite brother. Give her thirty seconds
and I'm gonna let you rock. Let go you next, famly.

Speaker 11 (02:04:41):
So when we're talking about North Carolina. The end that
I'm talking about, we're talking about the trailers. We're talking
about people that are in the newest cars. At the
end that I'm talking about, we're talking about where the
houses are like two and three acres apart. We're talking

(02:05:03):
about stuff like that. I do have uncles and aunts
that are in the Raleigh Durham area where they're sitting
in the two hundred and thirty thousand dollars homes that
have those three cars that are new, but that at
the other end, they're the ones that are sitting on

(02:05:24):
the land where they have the homes and some that
are living in trailers with horses on them. So right
now my land that I own is just sitting open
and flat where I'm trying to put homes on it
or rent it out to Campbell University.

Speaker 23 (02:05:43):
Miss nod miss last question, last question, Miss Newton, before
we pass it on to make Miss no new Where
do you do South Carolina or North Carolina have the
highest STD rate?

Speaker 9 (02:05:53):
One?

Speaker 6 (02:05:53):
Michael, Miss NOWDW I don't know.

Speaker 18 (02:05:55):
I got to look that.

Speaker 6 (02:05:56):
Look that up for me.

Speaker 23 (02:05:57):
That's a stack that's going to be the determined thing
right there to see where the highest STD rating, guys,
if you're just doing in the room. We discovered earlier
that Detroit, Michigan got the nastiest reproduction parts reproductive parts
between men and women, followed up by Philadelphia. But I'd
like to see interesting to find out what's going on
down in the Carolinas.

Speaker 6 (02:06:18):
Go ahead, mister.

Speaker 2 (02:06:19):
Hold on, hold up, mister hold up, hold on, make
I got you. Make sure you guys pinging the room
up for me too, and share the room up. I
know we having this conversation, but allow more people to
come inside of the conversation.

Speaker 3 (02:06:32):
My brother Rico just got on the stage. I got
tea here with me.

Speaker 2 (02:06:35):
I got annoying it. Brother Corey here, my brother Albert.
I think he's having a room later, so we'll be
able to transition over there.

Speaker 15 (02:06:42):
But make sure y'all tapp the fuck in.

Speaker 2 (02:06:43):
It ain't only about these conversations. Make sure y'all networking
with people on the stage as well. Y'all never know
who somebody can be or who somebody can become on
the stage, So make sure y'all reaching out and seeing
how you can get in contact with me or different
individuals that are on the stage. I need more people
from my podcast show. I need more people to understand
social media. I need more people to get into this
cryptocurrency that I'm in where I'm compounding my money with

(02:07:06):
my sister annoying it. There's a lot of shit going
on behind the scenes, but when we have these conversations
sometimes it can be kind of clouded, right, But make
sure y'all tap in so that way, you know, we
could work network and add value to each other. If
you're not at the table, you're on the menu. Let's
continue this conversation. The floor is open, mister, Make go ahead, bro,
let's get.

Speaker 13 (02:07:25):
No for the statistics about the STD ratings.

Speaker 35 (02:07:28):
We definitely will have high STD ratings and higher STD
ratings than North Carolina.

Speaker 9 (02:07:34):
I know that. Why does that make because shit down here?

Speaker 35 (02:07:40):
You already like a twenty five year old inside of
thirteen fourteen year old body. You've and me so like, definitely,
these kids are growing up faster than.

Speaker 13 (02:07:52):
They're supposed to.

Speaker 35 (02:07:55):
But that don't take away from the fact that both
of these places is bad places.

Speaker 13 (02:08:00):
Now they're so bad that the native here is now
moving out.

Speaker 35 (02:08:07):
And now you have a couple of people who miss
their friends trying to convince new people to come in
and shit, you feel me.

Speaker 13 (02:08:13):
I'm one of these natives that moved.

Speaker 3 (02:08:15):
You feel me.

Speaker 13 (02:08:16):
So I'm telling y'all as somebody that moved.

Speaker 9 (02:08:18):
Shit.

Speaker 17 (02:08:18):
The people that.

Speaker 13 (02:08:18):
Can't move don't want to be there.

Speaker 35 (02:08:20):
You feel me, So don't come down there thinking that
shit will be no peaches and cream and you feel
me like, nah, that'll be just dumb. I would be
a fucked up person to lie to you like that.
You feel people lot of me. When I came to Atlanta,
I thought I was moving to a better situation. Huh nie, slapper,
dumb ass myself.

Speaker 6 (02:08:37):
Why you love South Carolina?

Speaker 3 (02:08:38):
You in Atlanta?

Speaker 9 (02:08:39):
Now, yeah, I thought I was.

Speaker 6 (02:08:41):
You went from bad to worse.

Speaker 35 (02:08:43):
Listen, listen, and I thought it was because listen, a
bigger city, more opportunities and shit, man, it wasn't worth it.

Speaker 1 (02:08:50):
Man.

Speaker 13 (02:08:50):
I wish I would have gone someplace else.

Speaker 35 (02:08:52):
But it's like, nah, yeah, that shit ain't good, man,
neither ends of that shit good. I know just as
much degenerates and fucked up people in North Carolina as
I know inside my fucking city. So it's like matter
of fact, these niggas link up together this like a
power ranger squad. I mean, who the fuck you think
they're going to when they when she kicked off the
closest place to go to North Carolina and Atlanta.

Speaker 13 (02:09:14):
I think we're gonna grab some of them people. So
it's like, yeah, yeah, them people ain't.

Speaker 18 (02:09:19):
Y'all wanted me to give you top ten, right, I
got a call earlier.

Speaker 12 (02:09:25):
We need you to come back in.

Speaker 19 (02:09:27):
We get breaking news, we get breaking news, all right,
So I'm gonna give the this as top twenty five.
I'll give you our top ten cities with the highest
STI rates. Number one, like I said earlier, is Detroit, Michigan.
Number two, Philadelphia, number three, Montgomery, Alabama, Number four, Memphis, Tennessee.

(02:09:53):
Number five, Well, I thought it was I thought, I
feel like I'm missing something here. But number five is Baltimore, Maryland.
Number six is New Orleans, Louisiana. Number seven is Washington, DC,
number eight Saint Louis, number nine Baton Rouge, and number

(02:10:17):
ten San Francisco, California.

Speaker 1 (02:10:20):
So uh, we made the cut.

Speaker 9 (02:10:23):
North Carolina.

Speaker 6 (02:10:28):
Yeah, christ.

Speaker 20 (02:10:30):
So I just wanted to throw this little tidbit in here,
and this will be my last mission because I'm looking
for my article. One of your favorite legacy sisters raised
her family here, So I'll just say that and leave
that there for so you know, it's a good place.

Speaker 6 (02:10:48):
Definitely, it's a good place.

Speaker 9 (02:10:50):
I love.

Speaker 23 (02:10:50):
I love North Carolina. I love North Carolina. But they
may shout out to Teeth for coming through with the
stat stack. Man, what do you think about that steak?
He just gave us the top in the stage with
the with the dirtiest booties in the country.

Speaker 2 (02:11:04):
You need to stay away from those places. T Thank
you for that update, Thank you for that report. But
I think you should stay away from those places.

Speaker 1 (02:11:12):
You need to be, need to be in their place
to be.

Speaker 2 (02:11:19):
Yeah, look, I got my brother Rico, right. I want
to hear from Rico. He thinks he gonna just slide up.

Speaker 3 (02:11:24):
In here and not how quiet.

Speaker 19 (02:11:28):
More Ricos, less futures, more Ricos, less futures.

Speaker 2 (02:11:32):
Go ahead, you, Rico. We've been causing rockets in here
on a Monday. I need you to come through, my brother.

Speaker 6 (02:11:39):
You know, if I'm in the road, we calls the rugus.

Speaker 3 (02:11:41):
Rico.

Speaker 8 (02:11:42):
Let's go listen, man, what did y'all say?

Speaker 3 (02:11:45):
Listen?

Speaker 13 (02:11:45):
She did the statistics?

Speaker 2 (02:11:47):
Rico is We're we're talking about the city is making
black men look horrible. Sometimes you have good experiences when
you go to different cities and and you know, black
men are treating these women with care, respect and love,
and then you go to other parks in different cities
and it's a shitty experience. So I'm just accing today, Rico,
is is your city making black men look bad?

Speaker 11 (02:12:10):
Walk?

Speaker 8 (02:12:11):
I'm originally from Brooklyn, shout out to the starts, So
I think, like that's different. But I don't know, man,
I mean I think I think you can have a
good or bad experience anywhere, right depending on where you're at.

Speaker 17 (02:12:23):
Like, and you know, I.

Speaker 8 (02:12:29):
Don't know, man, what who what was saying prior? What
cities did they come up with and make black men
look bad?

Speaker 2 (02:12:36):
So t you want to you want to give Rico
a little you know, flashback of what we were talking about,
you know, just about the cities and we just broke
down a lot of them and then you know, Corey
came in with like ten more on top of yours.
But let's let's uh, let's break it down for Ricos
so you can get some typ.

Speaker 19 (02:12:52):
Of understand So, Rico, we were talking about the city
that makes black men look horrible. And so what I
brought to the same earlier was that I, like, you know, honestly,
I can't really speak to all the cities because I'm
out here dating all kinds of men from all kinds
of cities. But my theory was that the cities that had, like,

(02:13:12):
you know, things like entertainment and beautiful women, like all
the act men have access to all these beautiful women,
those would be the cities where black men might be,
you know, showing out more. But then that led us
to looking up the stats, the STI stats, because you know,
obviously if there are high STI stats, then that those

(02:13:34):
are places where folks are being sexually promiscuous, sexually irresponsible,
so on, so forth. So that's where we got to
presenting those cities and stats. And I don't know if
you heard them or if you would like me to
repeat them for you, but that's where we are.

Speaker 6 (02:13:52):
Yeah, but let me say quick T T can you
if I don't, I don't know if you can.

Speaker 3 (02:13:57):
But we did.

Speaker 23 (02:13:58):
We did the cities with the plus peans, But what
about the cities with the top crime cities?

Speaker 6 (02:14:05):
Because Rico think he's getting out of here.

Speaker 8 (02:14:07):
A whole nother topic see Oh my god, Cory.

Speaker 23 (02:14:10):
Yeah see Rico, think he getting out of because I'm
from New York, New York.

Speaker 19 (02:14:15):
Or people have the highest crime rate because we don't. Okay, yeah, sure,
no problem.

Speaker 23 (02:14:23):
Because think he's slick over the day. They didn't mention
my city. I'm from bed Snyder. Rico, y'all is some
ghetto negroes in New York too. I'm sick of this
with big rats, with big rats, Rico, y'all make New York.

Speaker 18 (02:14:37):
Only when Chicagoians come out here. We have big rats
out here.

Speaker 6 (02:14:41):
Okay, whoa James, you will let us say.

Speaker 18 (02:14:44):
That, James Duck. I was not talking about you, so Duck.

Speaker 8 (02:14:51):
I'm gonna be honestly, we just talked about the media.
There there's no city that's been worse than than Chicago.
There's there's been no because Chicago is like, like nah,
being honest, Like, if you think about it, like on
a on a on a cultural level, like intertwined with
hip hop, you got Los Angeles gonna be up there,
and you're probably gonna have Atlanta, and then you're probably

(02:15:14):
gonna have Chicago. Those are the three major cities that
when you're talking about the news and media and what
the negativity around them stories. It's always and it's usually
tied to rappers or.

Speaker 16 (02:15:24):
Tied to artist we go to something.

Speaker 8 (02:15:29):
Like Chicago outside of the voleus in Chicago, like really,
what do people highlight positive about? Philadelphia?

Speaker 12 (02:15:38):
Too?

Speaker 8 (02:15:38):
Is another one. Philadelphia's always been like like right now
is no.

Speaker 34 (02:15:46):
Don't forget men, listen, listen, Alba, you won't be throwing
shots at my city. Last time I checked, even even
in the supposed hottest of the year, Chicago didn't break
the most deadliest city to live in It's per capital

(02:16:06):
of certain shootings. In the case number two, Let's look
at it this way, because we we I see, we
want to throw shots at Chicago.

Speaker 6 (02:16:20):
James, Why they shoot at our city so much?

Speaker 3 (02:16:22):
James?

Speaker 36 (02:16:22):
What? What? What?

Speaker 19 (02:16:23):
What really shooting at Chicago? I just got back from
Chicago this week. It's a beautiful city, James.

Speaker 18 (02:16:28):
It wasn't no job.

Speaker 6 (02:16:30):
She didn't die. They shout out the teeth of going
to Chicago and not die.

Speaker 34 (02:16:33):
But what I'm talking So there was a comment about
Chicago being dangerous and I think rappers were thrown out
the last time I checked.

Speaker 36 (02:16:43):
There's not never been in the history of Chicago.

Speaker 34 (02:16:45):
But a major rapper being gunned down in Chicago, unlike Florida, Memphis.

Speaker 23 (02:16:55):
Was no, no, no Herico. You got the New York
Wi Fi man that the New York West File. You
got to get you some Chicago wis file to talk
on this stage crime.

Speaker 36 (02:17:07):
But like I said, like I said, major artists, you
know what I mean, we ain't talking. You know, I'm
gonna just keep it a band.

Speaker 34 (02:17:15):
And I'm from Chicago and you know it's no direspect
for the young cats. But like that d'll rap Shitnah, Nope.

Speaker 8 (02:17:26):
What I'm saying, no parents want to live there. No
parents want to But if you think about raising a
wholesome family, Chicago is not the city that comes to
mind if you think about damn bro. Like Bro, I
watched millions many documentaries with moms that want to leave
that area, that they're mad that they're that they're there,
and they want to get from out of that area. Bro,
like I'm talking about. It may be young people related,

(02:17:48):
but Chicago has a stigma around it about being violence
in the violence that's perpetrated there, and so does Philadelphia.
Like Baltimore is also one of those cities that.

Speaker 34 (02:17:59):
Yeah, again, sure we want to throw our PROPAGAINA on
this stage, we might as well. Let me just get
my long pin for people's short memory. I mean, we're
throwing off propaganda, is.

Speaker 18 (02:18:15):
What I'm trying to read that y'all still want to
argue about propaganda.

Speaker 3 (02:18:21):
You got the status.

Speaker 13 (02:18:22):
Let's talk about the stats peak.

Speaker 12 (02:18:24):
Okay, So.

Speaker 19 (02:18:30):
Using a mix of violent crime and homicide data from
the FBI reports, Yeah, so, uh, Memphis, Tennessee has the
highest crime rate number one, The second is Saint Louis,
third is Detroit, fourth is Baltimore, fifth is Cleveland, sixth

(02:18:54):
is Oakland, seven is well, seventh is Milwaukee, eighth is
Kansas City. Ain't this Philadelphia? And well, I guess they
put Memphis at number ten again because I guess it's
overlapping certain parts of trying to understand why they did that.
Already number one overlapping with indian Indianapolis, Albuquerque, Stockton, so,

(02:19:23):
and then they said another noteworthy mentioned is New Orleans,
t T.

Speaker 23 (02:19:28):
Can you go back to the top four Can you
read the top four stack? I just I just put
I just made a correlationstack. What's the top four teen?

Speaker 18 (02:19:36):
Memphis?

Speaker 17 (02:19:36):
Yeah?

Speaker 19 (02:19:36):
I was thinking it too, fighting over Vagina and stuff. Anyway, Memphis,
Saint Louis, Detroit, and Baltimore.

Speaker 6 (02:19:48):
Do you know that all four of those correct me?
For RONT? But they also were in the top five
or six with st STD rates.

Speaker 3 (02:19:57):
Am I right?

Speaker 24 (02:20:00):
Yeah?

Speaker 19 (02:20:01):
Holds on, let me just confirm before I say, but
I think you are correct. Yeah, yep, yep, yep yep.

Speaker 6 (02:20:09):
So, so, so what we get from these stats? He
correct me if I'm wrong.

Speaker 23 (02:20:14):
Saint Louis, Detroit, Memphis, and Philadelphia are all in the
top four or five for crime and dirty.

Speaker 19 (02:20:25):
Saint Louis wasn't up there for the for the STI. However, Philadelphia, Detroit,
and Memphis were.

Speaker 8 (02:20:37):
It was in the top ten earlier.

Speaker 18 (02:20:40):
Yeah, it wasn't top ten, but he says top five.

Speaker 42 (02:20:43):
So probably the only reason stl ain't out there because
half of.

Speaker 17 (02:20:48):
Them don't go to the doctor.

Speaker 6 (02:20:49):
Oh that's crazy.

Speaker 42 (02:20:51):
People saying, hey, you got some pills, you got some heels,
you could give me.

Speaker 17 (02:20:59):
What not?

Speaker 36 (02:21:00):
Nothing.

Speaker 17 (02:21:01):
I'm from Saint Louis. I'm telling y'all what I know.

Speaker 14 (02:21:04):
Now.

Speaker 11 (02:21:05):
As at let me see Atlanta was hold on one second,
because I did one.

Speaker 23 (02:21:14):
And SONNW why are you find why you're finding Atlanta.
I want to I want to bring up a point
where James and Rico debateing right historically, the propaganda what
they tell us is Chicago is the most violent city
and Houston has the most STDs. But based upon the

(02:21:34):
actual stats, that is actually not true.

Speaker 8 (02:21:38):
It's just not true in case, like I said, I
just found on the link I'm trying to put her
chat right now that Chicago in twenty twenty five remained
the homicide capital. I'm trying to put the link in
the chat right now. This is very much so true.
I don't know where t got her theme from. I'm
going to put the Chicago Chicago homicide stats inside the link,
I mean inside the chat.

Speaker 14 (02:22:00):
I Rico, I do have to correct something.

Speaker 6 (02:22:02):
Y'all good?

Speaker 18 (02:22:03):
So I do have to correct something.

Speaker 20 (02:22:05):
So my statement earlier was incorrect about the black married couples.
It wasn't the income. It was there at median wealth,
so that's the difference. So it wasn't medium income, it
was medium wealth. So their medium wealth of Black and

(02:22:25):
Latino families in Charlotte is three hundred thousand dollars, not
their income, but their wealth.

Speaker 6 (02:22:32):
Okay, shout out to Maya.

Speaker 23 (02:22:34):
Shout out to Maya for being accountable and said, I'm
going to correct the statement, doctor, but don't come up
here with your emoji.

Speaker 3 (02:22:41):
Doctor.

Speaker 6 (02:22:41):
We've been we've been looking for you for the last
three hours.

Speaker 3 (02:22:43):
You want to come back with you room coming up?

Speaker 24 (02:22:46):
Bro?

Speaker 6 (02:22:47):
You know you know I'm gonna support doctor Albert. What
what's what's your role of Albert?

Speaker 36 (02:22:52):
Hey, doctor slender?

Speaker 3 (02:22:54):
Yeah, they in Chicago.

Speaker 2 (02:22:59):
I wanted to say, hop, hold up, let me let
me see if Albert want to come through real quick?

Speaker 3 (02:23:04):
Albert, Yeah, what's up? Black people? Black people?

Speaker 16 (02:23:09):
It's all good?

Speaker 36 (02:23:10):
So good man. I know y'all excited, you know.

Speaker 21 (02:23:13):
Uh yeah, my room was about recovering from cheating, man,
recovering from cheating. That'll be at three o'clock center talk
about some things. Uh, but I did want to chime in,
you know, as a uh one of the top black
sociologists in the United States. I hold this, yeah, me,

(02:23:37):
it's me. When you're using stats, guys, there's practical stacks
and then there's numerical stacks.

Speaker 16 (02:23:45):
When it comes to human behavior and social activity, you're.

Speaker 21 (02:23:50):
Supposed to use practical stats because there's a lot of
complicated factors that affect those numbers, and that's why you
can get the place like Chicago where I'm not ducking
any bullets right now, and I'm chilling. But for some reason,
people go to these precincts and get totals from the

(02:24:12):
precincts that do not reflect the actual neighborhood. So, sociologists,
I'll tell you it makes some great congo, but it
might not be too active.

Speaker 16 (02:24:24):
Back to you, stat.

Speaker 23 (02:24:27):
No, no, wait, wait, wait, wait a minute, doctor Album, Wait,
wait a minute. I'm sick of you and James, because
y'all ain't the only cats from Chicago. We ain't gonna
act like Rico was wrong. These niggas getting burnt up
in Chicago.

Speaker 36 (02:24:42):
Come on, yeah, you talking.

Speaker 34 (02:24:47):
You're talking to two of them, maybe the two of
the maybe eight kings of shat.

Speaker 36 (02:24:52):
Let's get that correct.

Speaker 6 (02:24:53):
Well I'm number nine.

Speaker 36 (02:24:54):
Yea, that's what my city. Let's get that.

Speaker 20 (02:24:57):
Go that.

Speaker 23 (02:24:59):
Hey, hey, lets but doctor Abbert Garfield Park. Them niggas
ain't getting they caps feeled over there, Garfield Parks, till Dory.

Speaker 6 (02:25:08):
Evergreen, Pleasant. Come on, man, Now, I'm from the city.
Don't don't do that.

Speaker 36 (02:25:11):
Nineties man, Come on, all.

Speaker 6 (02:25:13):
Right, I know that James I'm an old nigga.

Speaker 9 (02:25:16):
But what am I supposed to go?

Speaker 36 (02:25:17):
Oh James, he said, evergreen? Come on man, hell even then,
it wasn't even like that.

Speaker 12 (02:25:24):
Come on man, you.

Speaker 1 (02:25:27):
Doctor.

Speaker 23 (02:25:27):
Hey, doctor, let me tell you something, Doctor Albert. I
made a mistake. Doctor Albert got into it with this
chick in Chicago. This is a true story, Doctor Albert.

Speaker 3 (02:25:35):
James.

Speaker 1 (02:25:36):
And I don't know.

Speaker 6 (02:25:36):
Maybe maybe I Hey listen, I got into it with
this chick.

Speaker 3 (02:25:39):
Man.

Speaker 23 (02:25:40):
We're sitting in the projects and she said something out
of pocket and doctor Albert I learned.

Speaker 6 (02:25:45):
I learned real quick not to use this term again.

Speaker 23 (02:25:47):
But I said, b I T c H. What you
say to me, doctor iversh. She went to the room
and my cousin told me to run. She went and
got a twenty five Dr Albert and as I was
running out of the door, all of her.

Speaker 6 (02:26:00):
Was flick click it. The girl from.

Speaker 23 (02:26:02):
Chicago was shooting at me the Albut that's when I
moved back to Texas and stopped going to Chicago for
the summers because I realized I was probably out of pocket.
At this point. Rico is correct. They crazy, not only
the men crazy, but the women are shooting negros.

Speaker 8 (02:26:19):
The most shootings over Memorial Day weekend. They have trended
so many times over Fourth of July weekends having the
most maybe they didn't result in homicide, but they had
the most shootings. They've trended like a million times. You
can go look at these stories where Chicago was number
one and trending of like having the most shootings, having
the most violent acts attacks. They was telling them police

(02:26:41):
in Chicago to go inside at a certain time of
night when they when and they have the most like
when it comes to like degenerate behavior of pushing it
towards young people and not not trying to be funny.
With the Nation of Islam being being there at Moss
miriam As being a staple in Chicago, they still haven't
been able to have any viable results even with them

(02:27:04):
being that being their headquarters.

Speaker 13 (02:27:06):
There no Ricka you correct.

Speaker 35 (02:27:08):
I think right now what I'm seeing is that the
media and the people online is purposely trying to misinform people.

Speaker 13 (02:27:16):
I don't know why, but that is what I'm saying.
They're misinforming people like crazy.

Speaker 23 (02:27:23):
Like mister make, you know what I'm seeing, mister Make,
I'm seeing doctor Albert and James Missing formed people. You
know why they want you to go to and get robbed.
They want you try to go to Chicago and get robbed.
Doctor Albert wants people to have psychological issues so he
could have more clients.

Speaker 36 (02:27:39):
Hold on, hold on, hold on, see yet again, I'm
not now while I'm on stage. You're not gonna do that.
So here's the thing.

Speaker 34 (02:27:46):
Since I said, it sounds like we got a few
yellow noodle back scared of the shadow ass negro damn. Now,
if that's the case, then.

Speaker 36 (02:27:59):
You should have no problem going to k Town, go
to High Park, go to South Shore. Ain't not gonna
happen to you.

Speaker 34 (02:28:09):
There's nothing gonna happen again, propaganda, a lot, a lot
of bs. No, it's not to say things don't happen. Hell,
things happen in every major metropolitan city in this country. Okay,
but at the end of the day, Chicago's tourism is
always constantly booming. Folk come to Chicago and ain't none

(02:28:33):
of that going down. So I mean, because that look
like oh no, no, no, no, no, no, you.

Speaker 36 (02:28:39):
Cherry picking again again. You you you haven't grown up
in Chicago.

Speaker 8 (02:28:44):
Don't get b b bro, bro. I'm being with I'm
speaking to the room title. The room title, say which
place you make? So the media hype that they get Bro,
it ain't about nobody being scared to go nowhere. But
I'm being honest. I'm from dudes don't think they can die.
So this whole thing you're saying. What I'm saying is,
if you look at the culture influence with Chicago, usually
it's around everything that's degenerated when it comes to young people,

(02:29:07):
it is, Bro, that's.

Speaker 34 (02:29:09):
Based on what you Listen, Rico, you are literally you
are reiterating a bunch of nonsense that you see on TV.

Speaker 8 (02:29:22):
So all the dudes that's participating in it, that that's
speaking on it on TV too, they just on their
line too.

Speaker 34 (02:29:28):
All the dudes, hold on, hold on, hold on, Rico.
So since you got all these stats that are erronious.

Speaker 28 (02:29:34):
Why don't you do me put it in the chat?

Speaker 34 (02:29:37):
Listen, I'm not gonna look at that bullshit because exactly
what it is. Tell me five black historical figures from Chicago.

Speaker 36 (02:29:44):
And what they've done. We're so cool to tell the negative.
No no, no, no no, because we're good to tell you.

Speaker 8 (02:29:52):
Try to you're trying to stump for your city so much, bro,
I don't. I'm not gonna stick my neck out for
Brooklyn when I know they degenerated in Brooklyn, like I'm
not gonna stick my neck out for New York and
not know like anytime things go left in New York,
like anytime things go left in Miami. So I don't
understand why you compelled to be up here and feel
like you're taking it personal because I'm talking about shtrack.

(02:30:13):
That's why they named it chack. It literally is called charrack.
It's crazy.

Speaker 28 (02:30:18):
That was a movie, sir, try again yet again.

Speaker 8 (02:30:24):
Named it that.

Speaker 18 (02:30:25):
Are y'all still having city Wars?

Speaker 6 (02:30:28):
Absolutely?

Speaker 23 (02:30:29):
We couldn't have gender team. We couldn't have gender wars,
So I created a city Wars. It started with the Carolina.
Now we moved on between Chicago Chicago. Absolutely n I
did this intentionally because nobody with the women and men
wouldn't fight, So we had to get the city to fight,
and doctor ivery wanted to sit up there and be quiet.

Speaker 8 (02:30:45):
Chicago was crazy.

Speaker 18 (02:30:49):
I ain't gonna hold you. That's probably aside from New York.

Speaker 19 (02:30:54):
Those those those skylines, like the city lines, absolutely beful city.

Speaker 11 (02:31:00):
I have to say, people now at least the people
in North Carolina live there that are having the wars.
But to have somebody who's never lived there argue with people.

Speaker 9 (02:31:16):
There but live there, you know what I mean.

Speaker 23 (02:31:19):
But to be fair, But to be fair, like I'm
you know, James, my guy. We all from Chicago, right,
But to be fair. The title says, is your city
making making black men look horrible? That's all it's saying,
and and and to James. To James Enrico's point, that's
the reason I listen.

Speaker 6 (02:31:38):
I listen.

Speaker 23 (02:31:39):
I realized that I am I am the king of chaos,
but I do things intentionally. There's always a method to
my madness. It started with Yay talking about the STD
rate in Houston. When we look up the actual status,
we realize that it's actually not true. Then we start
talking about violence in Chicago. There is violence, but there
are cities that have more violence. And so I think

(02:32:00):
what we're having, what we're having a conversation is the
difference between propaganda and reality. The reality is James is
entrenched in the city of Chicago, and he's saying, hey, listen,
get what I get what social media is telling you.
I get what the I get with media is telling you,
but that is not actually what's happening. Well, Rico is saying, Hey,
it may not be happening, but according to the title

(02:32:21):
and hip hop and everything else, Chicago looks really bad.

Speaker 6 (02:32:25):
Right, And so this is what you said, Corey.

Speaker 3 (02:32:28):
We said this when the room first old.

Speaker 2 (02:32:29):
Fact, we said, hold on, we said this when we
when we first opened the room, and we act individuals
because I want Lucky to chime into after this reset.
But I've had individuals chime in when the room first
fucking opened, and y'all said Chicago. It's the first fucking
city that y'all said. It was no other city. It's
a Chicago in New York. There was nothing else. Bro,

(02:32:50):
you know what I'm saying. I don't want to hear on.
I'd as soon as the room opened.

Speaker 3 (02:32:55):
That's what I but let me get a quick reset.
Let me get a quick reset, ping it up, that's
what I heard.

Speaker 2 (02:33:00):
Hold on, let me get a quick now after this, yo, Rico,
I feel you, Bro. I feel where you're coming from
as well, Rico, and I just want to do a
quick reset. Welcome to the media. Mentors, is your city
making black men look horrible? Pin this ship up?

Speaker 9 (02:33:20):
For me.

Speaker 3 (02:33:20):
Let's continue.

Speaker 27 (02:33:21):
Let's call I'm gonna start getting life goes on, honey,
my baby count don't looking for the ring.

Speaker 8 (02:33:30):
Fing it up, ping it up, ping it up, finger up,
Let's go out court, get off.

Speaker 6 (02:33:37):
Y'all fing that role, bull bing it up, ping it up,
hang it up. One of the time, thirty five East
seat of Time. Thing it a little up, everybody shame
signing people in the road.

Speaker 27 (02:33:48):
But I get splash to Let's go South school Town.

Speaker 8 (02:33:51):
I dilated.

Speaker 9 (02:33:52):
I've got the pr in the power.

Speaker 45 (02:33:53):
Don't gyrate you.

Speaker 6 (02:33:54):
I feel good.

Speaker 12 (02:33:55):
Get the fuck out my sighs.

Speaker 28 (02:33:56):
It's good, but you don't got no ties.

Speaker 9 (02:33:59):
I walk in, I got what.

Speaker 8 (02:34:06):
I gotos, but they all sitting crack.

Speaker 1 (02:34:11):
That looks like the last fifty.

Speaker 3 (02:34:16):
What the funk we're doing? Listen?

Speaker 9 (02:34:21):
How can you?

Speaker 3 (02:34:22):
Let's continue?

Speaker 9 (02:34:23):
Man?

Speaker 2 (02:34:25):
Yeah, I want I want you to get into que
I want you to get in, but NU got something
to say. Then I want to come to my sister
Lucky because I want her to chime because she's from Chicago,
you understand. I want I want to get some the
voices that's from there, because that's the first city that
I heard. But I want her to chime in after
after after you. Okay, that's good for you, bro, But
I got she's she's a moderator up here. I want
her to chime in. First you understand, so over to you,

(02:34:46):
then pass it to Lucky.

Speaker 6 (02:34:49):
Niggas what's going on?

Speaker 3 (02:34:53):
Yeah, go ahead, over to you, and then Lucky.

Speaker 11 (02:34:56):
Let's go saying I said, clearly, the proximity matter. Half
of the time the news is giving up negative information.

Speaker 14 (02:35:07):
That's all I want to say. Proximity matters.

Speaker 11 (02:35:10):
That's why when people were giving up this negative information,
they're hardly ever highlighting the parts of Chicago that are nice.
So people were gonna say, heck, yeah, Chicago is jumped.

Speaker 14 (02:35:23):
That's all I gotta say.

Speaker 3 (02:35:24):
All right, thank you for that, sister, Lucky are you?
Are you by your mic career?

Speaker 24 (02:35:28):
Hair?

Speaker 9 (02:35:28):
Can you?

Speaker 2 (02:35:28):
Can you chime into this? That's the first city that
I heard, sister. They said Chicago. They didn't think, you know,
And then it was New York, and then it was
men fifth you know what I mean. They thought, but
they thought that it was just horrible black men coming
from here. But I was telling them, you know, this environment,
maybe it's your city, maybe it's a thing. How do
you feel about this being a woman from Chicago over
the USA.

Speaker 17 (02:35:48):
Good afternoon.

Speaker 9 (02:35:50):
Everybody was so lucky.

Speaker 4 (02:35:54):
Because I do see and you know, Sack, I got
a lot of friends elsewhere, and they do call me
from other cities and see what's going on here.

Speaker 17 (02:36:02):
And you know, I've invited you, Marzullas.

Speaker 9 (02:36:05):
That's that.

Speaker 17 (02:36:05):
Come here.

Speaker 4 (02:36:06):
Let me show you what summertime shy is about. We
have great black men here, we have great mentorship programs.
The city is beautiful to think about it is is
that a lot of the times, the media and what
other places are if you are searching for something, you're
gonna attract that. So if you are feeding off of

(02:36:28):
negativity and you're looking for the negativity, that's what's gonna
catch your eyes.

Speaker 17 (02:36:32):
So a lot of these media outlets are.

Speaker 4 (02:36:37):
Seeing what's getting detraction and it's the negative things that
it's the shock value of the negative things that come
out of Chicago. We aren't even in the top ten
of the what the capitals of the murder rate, We're
not even in the top ten. Rockford, Illinois, which is
maybe an hour two hours away from US.

Speaker 17 (02:36:57):
Ranks higher than we do.

Speaker 4 (02:37:00):
We have mentorship programs, we have me and out here
that's actually getting a hold of the youth. It's actually
my son. He has plenty of me and in his
life that are that are guiding him in the right direction.
These men are very informidable, they're very resourceful, they're gentlemen.

Speaker 17 (02:37:21):
These these hood.

Speaker 4 (02:37:22):
Rack young niggas. That's that's the shock value, y'all. So
the thing, if this is what we are giving the
attention to, that's what they're gonna push. If we aren't
giving the attention to the positive ship that's on the
on the back end, in the back burner, that's taking
a back seat, y'all aren't gonna see it as much.
Maybe I have great friends, a lot of y'all probably

(02:37:46):
heard of Bobby Simmons, Leon Rodgers. They're doing great ship
for the city. So I honestly, I'm not gonna sit
up there and say that, you know, my city is
paying a bad picture of paying black men in.

Speaker 17 (02:38:01):
The bad light. I feel like every city got bad
men in them.

Speaker 4 (02:38:06):
It's what you choose to give your attention to. And
I'm gonna go ahead and rest my mic. But if anyone,
if anybody wants to come and experience summertime shy and
see some of these great black men and and come
to these festivities that we are having this sun them,
go ahead and hit my inbox and I will definitely
be your tour guide.

Speaker 2 (02:38:27):
Oh listen, I got I wanted that. I wanted that
flavor in there. You know what I mean, Corey James,
because she's from the city. So you'll get to you'll
get to hear both sides. Yeah, there is the Hood,
rad Wyns and all of that ship. But then Lucky saying, Yo,
this festivities out here with great black men doing great ship.
So Lucky taping thank you for being here. And you know,

(02:38:48):
if y'all want to, you know, get into festivities, hit
up her.

Speaker 3 (02:38:51):
I mean what James and Rico over the y'all we got?

Speaker 9 (02:38:57):
I don't.

Speaker 8 (02:38:57):
I don't even know how. I don't even know how
many hundreds of thousands cities there are. Bro, they made
number eighteen, so they didn't.

Speaker 3 (02:39:06):
You're on the Matrixrico, come back, please.

Speaker 4 (02:39:10):
So you're still trying to make You're still trying to
to dismiss. No, No, you're I said you're making points.

Speaker 17 (02:39:21):
I'm not.

Speaker 4 (02:39:21):
I'm not I'm not invalidating your point. I'm saying you're
making points to trying the negate that what I'm saying maybe.

Speaker 42 (02:39:31):
Not every every city. Every city, every city has bad
me and in it.

Speaker 17 (02:39:37):
Baby.

Speaker 42 (02:39:38):
But when I say this, my love, I'm gonna hold head.

Speaker 17 (02:39:44):
When I say this, come here and let me show you.

Speaker 8 (02:39:47):
Okay, let me show you.

Speaker 23 (02:39:50):
Do you know how many lucky lucky I'm gonna be
out there next weekend for the Black Yacht Weekend.

Speaker 8 (02:39:57):
By I know what you're talking about.

Speaker 17 (02:40:00):
Let's let's have a ball.

Speaker 3 (02:40:03):
See that's what I need to be. Boat shows and
ship what we're doing.

Speaker 45 (02:40:11):
So it's stat I guess one of the things is
growing up on the South Side of Chicago. I think
a lot of people watch too much television. I mean,
we are innodated at the early age about the who
we are as a culture of people. I mean, I
still you know, I live in Dallas. I went home
for for two weeks and went to the You got

(02:40:34):
so many festivals. We are innodated with blues, jazz, house music.
I mean, rap wasn't always a popular thing in Chicago.
You have to be like R and B, you have
to be blues and all of that. Rap didn't come
until later. If you think about it, we only have

(02:40:55):
a couple of rap artists. I mean one of my
grew up with. You guys know him as common we
know him as you know somebody else. But we have
so many great things.

Speaker 6 (02:41:07):
We have food.

Speaker 45 (02:41:08):
People come from all over the world to our food festivals.
So this thing that it is Chiraq. That was a
movie and Chicago did not get on the channel until
Obama started running and the Fox News ran with the
whole Charaq thing.

Speaker 3 (02:41:24):
So listen before listen, listen before we go.

Speaker 2 (02:41:28):
I went to want doctor Vaughan to get in, but
before we transfer, to make sure y'all know ping the
room up and share the room up, because you know,
we going to doctor Albert. But doctor Vaughan over to
you before I do one more reset and then I'm
away for the Albert to get that link.

Speaker 3 (02:41:41):
So doctor Vaughn over to you. Man, let's continue.

Speaker 11 (02:41:44):
So I think part of it is media, but there
are people from Chicago that don't talk about it in
the same way that y'all have talked about it in here.
My ex is from Chicago, his whole family is from Chicago,
and they dogged the shit out of Chicago. We had
to get about it there. It was so dangerous. You know,
we didn't want our kids to my grandkids to grow

(02:42:06):
up like that. That's what his mom talks about. So
while there are people that love and enjoy Chicago, I
think it's safe to say that there are also people
who don't see it in.

Speaker 14 (02:42:15):
The same light that y'all do.

Speaker 3 (02:42:20):
Lucky, go ahead, Lucky hold up.

Speaker 4 (02:42:23):
To people that have to they have to flee from Chicago.
Was a part of some ship in Chicago. I'm gonna
just say that, you growing up in a rough town anywhere,
you know how to move, you know how to mind

(02:42:46):
your business, and you know what not to do. If
people have to leave from Chicago, they were a part
of the bullshit that they were fleeing from. And I'm
just gonna leave it at that.

Speaker 8 (02:42:58):
Ahead, how am I using media outlets? If it's nineteen
thousand and five hundred cities in the US and y'all
ranked number eighteen, just because you did not make the
top ten, you still ranked number eighteen. There's almost twenty
thousand cities in the US. You guys ranked number eighteen,

(02:43:20):
So why so how am I'm just if you're eighteen,
you're still make the top twenty. That's an extremely vibe,
violent city. That's crazy that you would say, oh, if
it's almost twenty thousand cities in America, right, it's almost,
and you're number eighteen, and you're number eighteen. What does

(02:43:40):
that mean? You're eighteen. That's it's just insane.

Speaker 45 (02:43:44):
Eighteen every city. Do you know how many we're talking
large populations of city, sir? I think, I don't know
what book you're reading from, but you always go by
a large population. We're not talking about it'll be a
Mississippi or Pine Hill, Alibi.

Speaker 6 (02:44:00):
They cities too.

Speaker 9 (02:44:01):
Come on, dog, stop the stop the foolishness.

Speaker 1 (02:44:03):
Man.

Speaker 45 (02:44:04):
All I say is this is summertime. If you want
to go there, we go there. We can go on
the beach, we can go to the yacht party, we
can go to the skyline party. There are plenty of
places to go downtown. There's a reason why even other
people who don't look like us come to Chicago, stay
downtown and have a wonderful time in Chicago.

Speaker 3 (02:44:30):
So you got.

Speaker 45 (02:44:32):
O'Hair, you got Midway you have, you got so many,
you got High Park, Beverly, you got every you got
Northwestern University of Chicago where the Adam bomb was built.

Speaker 8 (02:44:48):
What everywhere, Bro, you go to the West Side I
lived in.

Speaker 28 (02:44:57):
Is probably more dangerous.

Speaker 8 (02:44:59):
Memphis is probably forty second Street in Times Square all
the time. That's what are we talking about.

Speaker 9 (02:45:08):
Let me ask you a question.

Speaker 8 (02:45:11):
Your whole logic is dumb. That you go to a
dumb and we know each other.

Speaker 45 (02:45:17):
It's just the way the way you are and you
walking down in certain places, they're not going to accept
you from.

Speaker 8 (02:45:24):
Bro. You can go to Miami to the beach, but
if you go to Open you go to Open Liberty Havana.
That's a different time, Bro. You can't those people stay
on the beach on South Beach time. Anybody, you give
me some popcorn right now so you have this don't
make no sense you're saying if you go downtown Chicago

(02:45:45):
because y'all got a nice area with with a scenic
you and restaurants that don't that don't mean, Bro, you're
talking about King's Highway or kings At whatever y'all got, y'all.
Uh drive God, whatever.

Speaker 3 (02:46:03):
I want to hear from O G. I've been talking
all that bit O G. What's good man? I know
you have room coming down, got a.

Speaker 21 (02:46:10):
Room coming soon, But I wanted to say like, I
can understand where Rico's coming from, But what he's talking
about are the cities, the area I'm sorry, in the
city where we're talking about the inner part from the
lower end lower number we call it the low end.

Speaker 20 (02:46:29):
To to.

Speaker 21 (02:46:31):
Various blocks throughout Chicago in the city, and then some
areas on the West side.

Speaker 16 (02:46:38):
Of Chicago, a small amount on the North side.

Speaker 21 (02:46:41):
But Chicago is a really big city, so those prime
areas are a very small portion of the city. It
just got a lot of notoriety because of the whole
uh you know, hit of music culture and stuff like that.

Speaker 16 (02:46:57):
That's what kind of you know, gave it a bunch
of sensationalism.

Speaker 21 (02:47:01):
But the city on the whole has a bunch of
sub sections that far out number those crime ridden areas,
which i really only make up a few blocks compared
to the entire city.

Speaker 16 (02:47:13):
So that's really where what a lot of us Chicagoans
are kind of stuck with.

Speaker 21 (02:47:19):
So the shtrap thing is a rap thing, it's a
hip hop thing, you know, got killed and there from
that point on, boom, it just blew up like that.

Speaker 17 (02:47:30):
M thank you, Albert, we go, honey.

Speaker 4 (02:47:37):
I'm not disagreeing with nothing that you're saying, because everything
that you're saying is very factual. However, what I'm saying
is the reason why, the reason why we have these
statistics and all of these we ranked nineteen, baby, and

(02:47:58):
everybody knows it's a lot of lies and inaccurate numbers
that are counted. Just like I'm pretty sure all of
you seen how this past weekend a female police officer
CPD officer was killed and they blamed one of the
hoodlums that they were chasing, and it actually was her
partner that shot her in the back of the head.

Speaker 17 (02:48:20):
So we have a lot of skew stats.

Speaker 4 (02:48:23):
That's coming out of the city in Chicago because a
lot of people, nor if it's to Ureco, but a
lot of people will take that negative shit and run
with it. You know how people and this and I'm
not just I'm not gonna just relate this to city
a person. Y'all know how people be so quick to

(02:48:43):
run and believe a rumor about you rather than actually
getting to know who you are and knowing the truth.
It's the same, This is the same thing. Stats and
numbers can be skewed. These are very very very minute
subsections and areas of Chicago that these things may be

(02:49:03):
accurate for.

Speaker 17 (02:49:05):
But this city.

Speaker 4 (02:49:05):
Look, let me tell you something. You could drive from
one end of the city to the other end of
the city all within the hour. You're still in the
city of Chicago.

Speaker 8 (02:49:13):
We are.

Speaker 4 (02:49:14):
This city is very, very big. The negative things is
what people are putting the spotlight on, so it's making
it seem like it's a bigger thing than what it is.
There are lives that's coming out there. There's a whole
lot of things that that is skewing the real the
real things that's going on in Chicago. It's not it's

(02:49:35):
not as dangerous as what media and other people make
it seen.

Speaker 28 (02:49:39):
And a lot of people.

Speaker 42 (02:49:42):
And you're still not listening.

Speaker 8 (02:49:47):
Five hundred cities.

Speaker 4 (02:49:52):
I need you to listen, because baby, I'm gonna listen
to you, and I'm not gonna negate anything explain you
being a crash out and not listening. That's that's why,
that's that's why, that's why, that's I never said you were.

Speaker 42 (02:50:11):
Making it up, Rico. I never said you were making comprehension.

Speaker 8 (02:50:16):
Comprehension dangerous.

Speaker 42 (02:50:18):
Number Comprehension is key, my baby, our number eighteen.

Speaker 12 (02:50:25):
This is why.

Speaker 4 (02:50:29):
I like Rico so much, but Coper conversations with him
it goes no fucking where because he wants this point to.

Speaker 42 (02:50:35):
Be validated, and that's it. He doesn't want to validate
anybody else's point.

Speaker 4 (02:50:39):
Now, I validated your point, and I and I wish
you could understand and listen and comprehend what I'm saying.

Speaker 17 (02:50:45):
But I guess you are just hell driven on you
being right, and your right is the only right, and
that's the only right.

Speaker 8 (02:50:51):
That eighteen It don't make no sense.

Speaker 42 (02:50:55):
Just said you're not listening.

Speaker 8 (02:50:57):
It's not like y'all number I mean, it's not like to.

Speaker 4 (02:51:02):
Respond without understanding. That's how I do understand what you know.
You don't because you're like.

Speaker 8 (02:51:10):
Some ship.

Speaker 17 (02:51:11):
You are.

Speaker 12 (02:51:14):
You are.

Speaker 17 (02:51:16):
You're not making no.

Speaker 8 (02:51:17):
New points, y'all are number eighteen.

Speaker 42 (02:51:20):
You are not making no new points.

Speaker 9 (02:51:23):
You are.

Speaker 42 (02:51:26):
Speaking of what I said. You are repeating what you said.

Speaker 11 (02:51:31):
I think.

Speaker 17 (02:51:35):
Speaking Thank you, baby. I'm just listening from now on.

Speaker 46 (02:51:40):
So I'm from New York, right, And what's happening with
the with the stats that that you're saying that Chicago
is what they did for New York back in the
nineties when the Bloods Crips all that stuff hit the
streets in the nineties, the crack error, all that stuff
or what what what Chicago's experience said now is what
New York experience back then. And it took New York

(02:52:00):
a long time to get that off, to get that
off our back, and we're still trying to get off
our back. So it's pretty much going through the same transformation.
But yes, there's crime, there's bad neighborhoods, there's drugs, there's
killing what those kids can be, But that's not the
whole city. It's in pockets of throughout the city. It
was the same thing in Brooklyn, New York A. At

(02:52:22):
one point they said, oh New York had the crist
the highest crime rate back in the nineties, but that
was certain pockets. It wasn't the entire city. So I
understand what Rico is saying, and I also understand what
the other person is saying as well.

Speaker 8 (02:52:35):
That's not how you get to a homicide rate, bro
It's not what you say or this is documented.

Speaker 9 (02:52:41):
Hold on, this is documenting broke.

Speaker 8 (02:52:46):
They are literally they are literally on a list. If
it's if I said it, it's twenty down America. Hold on,
if it's in America and y'all are in the top twenty.
Nothing you can say to reap, to retort that y'all
ain't coming at five hundred and forty one or nine
hundred and seventeen or one thousand. Y'all didn't even come

(02:53:07):
out at one hundred and three. Y'all came in at.

Speaker 17 (02:53:12):
All.

Speaker 3 (02:53:12):
Right, Listen, listen, listen, God damn all right, all right, alright, listen.

Speaker 2 (02:53:20):
Shit, hold on, We're going over to doctor Albert. I'm
going crazy right now, Doctor, I was about to start
in ten minutes. Let me get one more share before
we get out of here. Please, damn, y'all gonna go crazy.
I'all gonna give me a headache.

Speaker 9 (02:53:34):
We bless tho.

Speaker 16 (02:53:36):
Can I say Philadelphia?

Speaker 3 (02:53:37):
List Can I get one mic bro?

Speaker 6 (02:53:40):
What's going on?

Speaker 17 (02:53:42):
Sixteen people? Bro?

Speaker 14 (02:53:44):
Go ahead?

Speaker 3 (02:53:44):
And then yeah, go ahead.

Speaker 46 (02:53:46):
Not even as big as Chicago, right, But it also
was also listened as the highest murder rate in the
country about one point. You know what I'm saying. But
it's pockets of what's going on in Philadelphia. It's not
the whole city of Philadelphia. So I think that's I
think that's what's being misconscrewed is that if the pockets
is what people are looking at, and that's what the

(02:54:07):
media is taking an information and spreading it around opposed
to it being like an actual number of the whole city.

Speaker 9 (02:54:17):
Yeah, So.

Speaker 29 (02:54:19):
To this title is your city, No, the city is
not making black men look horrible. Black men are making
black men look horrible by the things they do black men.
And so because I would say that to the title
is not your city, are the black men in your

(02:54:40):
city making black men look horrible?

Speaker 31 (02:54:43):
Because the city doesn't make a man do anything. Cities
are made looking bad by the people who live in them.
A city by itself is just a piece of land.
It's the people that walk and talk and breathe and
make choices in those cities that make the city look bad.

Speaker 9 (02:54:58):
Simple as that.

Speaker 31 (02:54:59):
Because because crime is committed by people.

Speaker 29 (02:55:03):
People, black men, black women, white men, white women, all
other All.

Speaker 47 (02:55:09):
The things that happen in every single city, things that happen,
things that that are pushed out, or things that are
done are done by people. So it just goes it
goes back to the lack of accountability in our society
because we want to blame. Now we're blaming cities for
black men looking horrible, instead of saying, why are black

(02:55:31):
men doing things that make themselves look horrible to make
us look horrible.

Speaker 9 (02:55:37):
I'm done, well.

Speaker 3 (02:55:43):
Before we shut down, we got like three minutes. Let's go.

Speaker 28 (02:55:50):
I think.

Speaker 3 (02:55:57):
Hopefully Rico will go there or something that when you
want him to go.

Speaker 8 (02:56:01):
Now, I'm saying, Bro, you can find good anywhere. Bro,
I'm not trying to come at their city. Bro, I'm
pretty sure there's beautiful things to do there, there's beautiful
parks there, There's probably wonderful people there. I'm not saying
anything bad. I'm not attacking that city. I don't know nothing.
I'm pretty sure they got wonderful people, schools, educators. What
I'm saying is that if I'm an out, if I'm
from Russia and I don't know anything about a place,

(02:56:24):
this is all me using objective logic. If I don't
know anything about Brooklyn, I don't know anything about Chicago,
New Orleans, Philadelphia and these things, and I just pull
up stats. That's all I'm doing. It's based off research
that people get off homicide, race, burglaries, personatis, gang got
tapt whatever it is. And I look at that and

(02:56:45):
I tell somebody it's literally nineteen thousand and five hundred
cities across the United States. This particular city and homicide
rate ranks number eighteen on that list. This is what
their standing is based off. People killed for what reason.
I cannot say, well, you just don't know about the
city and you just don't know. It's like I don't know,

(02:57:07):
I do. I'm not seeing that you didn't have a
good experience there. I can only from an objective view
look at what the crime statistics is saying. Somebody from
New Orleans love New Orleans. They have the Mahdi Grodel
but they have two cities that's on the top ten list.
They got Tree Vault in New Orleans. They're both on
the top ten lists. So Philadelphia, people go to the

(02:57:30):
Rocky Monument, people go watch the games there, people love
all the Liberty bell there. But Philadelphia is still on
that list. It's not about me attacking the city. I'm
not attacking DC. People love watching DC. But Baltimore that
also got a Prince George County that has the highest
rate for black people income in one selective area, and

(02:57:53):
Prince George County per capital, but they still don't talk
about that. Baltimore also has one of the high crime
race and murder.

Speaker 3 (02:58:02):
What is no more questions for Rico. It's over.

Speaker 2 (02:58:06):
We got to go to Doctor Albert's room. It's no
more questions. We're gonna have to do part two on
this about cities and ship right, it's a rap. Yeah,
it's over, bro, go to doctor Listen, we shutting down
right now. Make sure y'all go to Doctor Albert's room.
Make sure y'all tapping with everybody that was on the
stage today. I appreciate y'all. I'm coming back in with
another topic real soon. Make sure y'all join the Media
Mentors Network. Anybody that has not connected with me offline,

(02:58:29):
I don't know what the fuck you're doing. Crypto, social media, bitcoin,
I'm doing a lot of shit. But we're going over
to doctor Alberts room. Send me a message if you
want to come on the podcast show too.

Speaker 10 (02:58:38):
Let's go up Philly Quack out on Richard Milly.

Speaker 9 (02:58:40):
It's not a silly what hall is?

Speaker 10 (02:58:42):
Money makes me want to hear my ditty buck Teller.
Teller had to make him to give me. I have
to tell her I can't pull a ship off the
lock me in, my boys, you know that we shouldn't.
I got niggas that'd be moving to town, right, that's
the end of that.

Speaker 38 (02:58:51):
No, I cannot you come up man.

Speaker 10 (02:58:52):
These niggas out here swear they talking drop by on
the wreck.

Speaker 6 (02:58:55):
You are walking cop double Park.

Speaker 43 (02:58:57):
New Land, but with no parkasto come or discuss.

Speaker 1 (02:58:59):
So I've bended over a little baby.

Speaker 10 (02:59:01):
Just off your line, yesh your camo, But I call
at least butter Scotch.

Speaker 6 (02:59:03):
Y'all fir yere they chopping that super.

Speaker 16 (02:59:05):
I got my money.

Speaker 27 (02:59:06):
Then I had to just fuck up like I'm the
only one.

Speaker 1 (02:59:08):
That fucked on that bitch. But I made that hole
just coming.

Speaker 9 (02:59:10):
Just hang up like yeah, I'll.

Speaker 1 (02:59:11):
Pulled up in my carpet. Y'all blessed him. We got
to shoot it.

Speaker 8 (02:59:13):
That's gonna pull up here.

Speaker 9 (02:59:14):
It's like.

Speaker 1 (02:59:18):
Yay, making money like a nigga. Don't need to drive?
Why not open room or naughty.

Speaker 9 (02:59:21):
Like fatty want.

Speaker 8 (02:59:22):
Michael Webb helped me drive the ready rock, throwing.

Speaker 14 (02:59:24):
Money and beat the pockets.

Speaker 10 (02:59:25):
Got heavy, not hitting quala. They don't know when the
fetti stop. Every day my birthday water confetti stock. She
looked good, but she went fashion. Nobles took a shopping
with her right in some Vetomo got a bitches. He
lived in New York, but I took up right down
right in La spend one hundred thousand right here to
bever interseection probably where I'm the fellas.

Speaker 8 (02:59:40):
I'm on Rody.

Speaker 1 (02:59:41):
Oh it ain't shit you could tell, and I'm on
the boot. It ain't shit you can sell them.

Speaker 3 (02:59:45):
They would have had a fire room.

Speaker 2 (02:59:48):
Make sure y'all tap in going over to doctor Alberts
right now. Make sure y'all tap into the Media Mentors Network.
Make sure y'all tapping with anybody that was on the
stage today, and make sure y'all tapping with me as well.
I need more people for the podcast, your social media growth.
I need more people to take this shit serious. And
we also launched the finn Girl Club as well. Yeah,

(03:00:08):
we're going crazy with that. We going tapping in with you, bro.
Make sure you hit me, Jay, hit me, Lalita, hit me.
Last goal, We're going up.

Speaker 3 (03:00:15):
What's up?

Speaker 14 (03:00:16):
May?

Speaker 3 (03:00:18):
I got what you said?

Speaker 14 (03:00:19):
Follow what it's the follow Tuesday?

Speaker 3 (03:00:22):
I got you right now.

Speaker 2 (03:00:23):
I got you Because I think I'm limited, but I'm
about to remove somebody for you see you see this,
I can't even add nobody else, but I'm about to
remove somebody that I don't really Okay, No, that's what
I'm doing right now.

Speaker 3 (03:00:36):
I'm about to do it right now. Bang. No, that's
the wrong one. I did the wrong one.

Speaker 1 (03:00:42):
My bad.

Speaker 3 (03:00:43):
I just added you.

Speaker 2 (03:00:44):
Just now make sure you're tapping with me. All right,
let's get it, Jay, We're going over there. Bro were
out of here.

Speaker 3 (03:00:49):
Good room.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark

My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark

My Favorite Murder is a true crime comedy podcast hosted by Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark. Each week, Karen and Georgia share compelling true crimes and hometown stories from friends and listeners. Since MFM launched in January of 2016, Karen and Georgia have shared their lifelong interest in true crime and have covered stories of infamous serial killers like the Night Stalker, mysterious cold cases, captivating cults, incredible survivor stories and important events from history like the Tulsa race massacre of 1921. My Favorite Murder is part of the Exactly Right podcast network that provides a platform for bold, creative voices to bring to life provocative, entertaining and relatable stories for audiences everywhere. The Exactly Right roster of podcasts covers a variety of topics including historic true crime, comedic interviews and news, science, pop culture and more. Podcasts on the network include Buried Bones with Kate Winkler Dawson and Paul Holes, That's Messed Up: An SVU Podcast, This Podcast Will Kill You, Bananas and more.

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

Β© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.