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June 4, 2025 • 31 mins
Join us as we dive into the 'Mount Rushmore of Black Superheroes.' In this engaging podcast episode, we discuss our top four picks for the greatest black superheroes of all time.. Whether you agree or have your top picks, mark your opinions in the comments. This episode celebrates representation and the impact of black superheroes in media, comics, and beyond!
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:06):
All right, welcome to another a podcast. What's going on
on marketing? Mall yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
Old market I'm back in the building. The lag came back.
Were doing good. We had podcast in the row and
he's doing good.

Speaker 1 (00:25):
Now it's back today. It's going to be a special one.
It's gonna be a really good one. I think it's
a great podcast to have. It's the mount Rushmore of
black superheroes. So we only get four superheroes, four for
superhero for our RuSHA bour And if you guys agree
with us, that's perfectly fine. If you think that our
listen is great, that's great too. But either our opinions

(00:48):
and if you have something leaving in the conversation, belove
for us, and we will love you're not rush Wars.

Speaker 2 (00:53):
And we also definitely will explain why we picked them.
Just a little, a little breezing line, you know, I
think we should both have one honible mentioned is that.

Speaker 1 (01:04):
Okay, do you think that's fair? I think that's fair.
I think it's fair.

Speaker 2 (01:08):
I think it's fair. Just I'll just get this little
quick overw thing real quick. Before we started, we came
about this I did for this podcast because we all
it's like a thing. Now, what's your Aunt Rushmore best athlete?
So basketball player, author or directors. So it's been like
a thing. And we saw somebody do like they're not

(01:29):
Rushmore black superheroes. And when we saw the list, I
think it was like Storm Black Panther, who's.

Speaker 3 (01:37):
The oh blue Marble?

Speaker 1 (01:40):
And who was the last one he picked?

Speaker 2 (01:43):
I can't remember if it was it was.

Speaker 1 (01:49):
It wasn't either, No, it.

Speaker 3 (01:53):
Was oh Brother Voodoo.

Speaker 1 (01:56):
They didn't take it back.

Speaker 2 (01:58):
I think he else he switched on, but it was
in that it was so yeah, yeah, it was a
post we saw on Instagram. So we talked about it
amongst ourselves. You know what, we should share this with
our views.

Speaker 3 (02:12):
Y'all like family. Yeah, y'all like family. So get that
good old Mount Rushmore.

Speaker 2 (02:17):
And people who are not familiar with the Mount Rushmore
term is referring to the actually Mount Rushmore the four
Presidents because it's sposed to be the four greatest Presidents
and quotations. That's where people get the idea from the
Mount Rushmore like it's the four greatnss in your opinion,

(02:37):
and it's always your opinion. That's why when people asking,
it's like what's your but claric, this is not we
don't think this is like the best of all time.
This is our you know, our Mount Rushmore so exactly,
just to clarify that nobody used to this superhero is
better than that.

Speaker 3 (02:56):
No, we're not.

Speaker 1 (02:58):
I think that's Barrel is better than that. Okayvin, all right,
let's start. You start this going off with your aut Rushmore.

Speaker 2 (03:15):
My Mount Rushmore so, my Mount Rushmore, the automatic first
two for me. And it's probably for a good I say,
a good sixty of us blurreds out there. It's gonna
either it's gonna it's gonna be for me, Black Panther
and Storm because and you know what I always hear

(03:38):
people say, because Black Panther was the first. It's like, hey,
y'all gotta stop saying that it wasn't though it wasn't
the first. It was once before him, but we won't
get too deep into that. But he wasn't the first.
He was just the first mainstream, that's all. It is
the first main stream. So it's just his significance of

(03:58):
that and the fact that he came onto the scene
giving the fantastic for them hands, had his own kingdom,
his own text, so it was all those things about
him even he first came out, and then it's just
how he's growing over the years.

Speaker 3 (04:13):
Influence and pop culture.

Speaker 2 (04:16):
And media music like he he that dude and then
Storm that the Metrice getting attested this Storm is just
that that that girl. She is the mutant, like she
is the X Man or X one man, how everyone say.

Speaker 3 (04:32):
But it's like she's been a leader of the team.

Speaker 2 (04:36):
She's an African goddess, had her relationships, went to Challah,
so that that unity that they brought together with the
X Man, and like it's she's been so important over
what fifty years now, and it's like she's that staple
because she wasn't.

Speaker 1 (04:52):
The Metrice always says this.

Speaker 3 (04:54):
And I love when he correct people about this.

Speaker 2 (04:56):
Everybody goes and says Storm was the first blackfeo though,
tell him what was Demetrice?

Speaker 1 (05:03):
I said, yea, he wouldn't. He's doing bake I blanked
out bad A long week night. Yeah, thank you, Yeah
you know whisper I got that long week man.

Speaker 2 (05:23):
No, it is because with the Betrice to go like that,
I know he's had a long week because that's usually
like his rapid fire every time. So she's her and
Black Panther both have like that that influential kind of
thing when it comes to like superhero So them two,
I probably, like I said on a good sixty seventy

(05:46):
sixty five seventy percent.

Speaker 1 (05:48):
About Rushmore the Black Superheroes. So my next two.

Speaker 2 (05:56):
It it kind of it with the next one because
I like both of them, and they both the movies.
Both of them came out around the same time. It
was hard for the superhero movies at the time. But
I've come to a conclusion and I have to go Blade.
But I said, I know, I said to you guys,
they can switch out with Blade and Spun.

Speaker 1 (06:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (06:18):
But however, I was a Blade Man before I knew
about Spun because of the movie for Wesley Snights, and
it made me want to get more into like knowing
about him in the comics, and then like even finding
out that Marvel adapted the movie backstory to the character

(06:38):
because before he wasn't a vampire, he was really just
a vampire hunter. And when they saw in the nineties,
they shifted it to that backstory, and I was like,
that's so cool. That influenced it, and then Blade in
the real world save the company Marvel like the movie
Blade saved the company. Literally if it's the BLA, we

(07:01):
don't have an n c U, we don't have a
Phase one through five, we don't have these video games
like Blade is what saved Marvel.

Speaker 3 (07:10):
So his impact alone is just that's Mount Rushmore.

Speaker 1 (07:14):
You know, that's my restaurants a good point.

Speaker 2 (07:18):
They know it shut out. What's this nice who portrayed?
He is Blade, like he said?

Speaker 1 (07:23):
And the thing is like before that because we only
had but Black Kila before that was more or less
like a black vampire. Felt like it was getting away
from that kind of like a more serious like a vampire,
black vampire kind of story and be officially really a

(07:46):
horror because Black Love is a horror. But like it
was nice exactly that camps to exactly and taping marbles
just as icing on the keg as you said.

Speaker 2 (07:59):
That's what I'm saying, Like that just that's iconic. That's
icon status, right status, can't it? So definitely Blade is
my number is my number three in my number five
is somebody who I.

Speaker 3 (08:13):
Think a lot of people over the five my number four.

Speaker 2 (08:18):
Yeah, now the beach, the beaches rupping off on me, y'all, man,
it has been a week though he ain't. But yeah,
my number four spot is a hero that I think

(08:39):
gets overlooked a lot and a lot of these conversations
and I and it's it's really because he came for
a generation that's basically our generation. So it don't seem
to some people who's like younger than us, it seems
like he hasn't been around that long. But for us,

(09:00):
we know, like the comic book History, But my man,
John Stewart green Landon himself, the man, as the Beatrice
puts it so perfectly, the man who's who personifies and
is what a green Landin is like all.

Speaker 1 (09:21):
The other Greenlanders. Yeah, when you when people think of
Green Lantern, they think John's Philip. For how Jordan's most
times early two thousands kids, you think because he grew
up with him with John Stewart instead of how Jordan's.

Speaker 2 (09:39):
I knew about Jordan Stewart before I did Howl Jordan's.
I thought he was the Green Lantern.

Speaker 3 (09:45):
So when they was like Jordan was like, oh, who
the white Greenlanders?

Speaker 1 (09:51):
I was like, who is this? I was like, who's
this guy?

Speaker 3 (09:54):
I was like, I thought it was just John.

Speaker 2 (09:56):
And they introduced the whole Greenland Court. But then I
found out it was how First I was like, who
is this? So it's like even what he represents as
a character, like his background being in the Marines and
stuff like even with because with how he was in
the Air Force, but it's like with John Stewart, like

(10:19):
the background comes like the area he grew up in,
his his war history and all that, and it's like
how he leads a team. He's not afraid to stand
up to not only the villains but the heroes and
his team. Like he one person who I've seen him
come at Batman and tell him, hey man, this is

(10:39):
what we're gonna do, or this I don't think this
is what we should do. So he just he's that
definition of when you're younger and you look for these
characters like that strong, like masculine, like black Man, but
in a positive way, and that representation.

Speaker 1 (10:58):
He's what he's That's what we got.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
When we were younger, And it wasn't to be honest,
it was not a matter of fact.

Speaker 1 (11:05):
It was really him and that was it.

Speaker 2 (11:08):
We didn't have many as far as like animation and
cartoon characters, so it was him. Then Virgil's dad on
static shot, So that was all. He wasn't a superhero,
but he was a good he's a good dad.

Speaker 1 (11:20):
So he was the community man exactly.

Speaker 2 (11:24):
So I'm like, man, is that not not Rushmore? Because
he really, he really was there for a whole generation.
And then on top of that, I always tell people too,
we're talking about comic books. If you go back to
his first appearance, he was like, straight up in your face,
like I'm a black man and I'm proud of it.

Speaker 1 (11:46):
Yeah, he said, I don't, yeah where I think he
took off his master like that, and he the I
think the only lantern that actually not have him him?
What's his face?

Speaker 2 (12:03):
Who's gonna be in the new Superman movie?

Speaker 1 (12:08):
All right? Guard? All right? You know I was right.

Speaker 3 (12:17):
Okay, we're helping each other tonight. I just had one.

Speaker 1 (12:20):
He had one. We're putting the clues together. Hey see
the bounce back.

Speaker 2 (12:34):
So definitely, man, John Stewart is the last, not last,
but that's that he's on that Mount Rushmore. For me
and for my honorable mention, I would honestly have to go.
It was tough because I was gonna say I come,
but I gotta go static because static static just got
a special place.

Speaker 1 (12:54):
In my heart man.

Speaker 2 (12:56):
Besides the whole point of recently he hasn't been like
him the right when the stories haven't been good.

Speaker 1 (13:02):
I don't care about that.

Speaker 2 (13:04):
No, even if it was twenty some years ago and
the comics was thirty some years ago, static Is basically
was us like like me and Demetris, we saw ourselves
and Static he was a young black nerd at a
time when it wasn't like a thing, Like it wasn't cool,

(13:26):
and it wasn't the it thing when you had to
function through high school and figure yourself out. Like when
I saw that show and read the comics, I was like, man,
I can relate to this. It was like it was
finally the superhero we could relate to as far as
like race and as far as like personality, because of
course we had Spider Man and all that. But it's

(13:48):
like they it ain't hit me the same cause, yeah,
Spider Man is this and that, but Spider Man don't
look like me. That's just a special place in my
heart and the only reason. And he's not on the
Mount Rushmots because he doesn't. He hasn't carried that weight
that the other heroes have over the years, and it's
only because he has not been held but right or

(14:10):
they haven't treated him his stories, and that's and it's
not the character's fault. It's the whole thing that happened
with Milestone and when he went to DC and then
the show animated show got canceled, so he was going
for all those years, and it was just it's one
of those characters that's been handled poorly, and it's so
unfortunate because it's a great character, the stories and the

(14:33):
background behind how he got his name, the supporting characters
around him, like, it's a great story. So that's my
honorable mention because Static always gonna hold a special place
in my heart. I know the Metrice always say that too.
So yeah, I'm gonna turn it over to you, my brother.
I made what I gotta say.

Speaker 1 (14:53):
All Right, we got some similarity on our list. Okay,
Black Panther was one on the list and Storm is there.
But Black Panther is there because not only because of
his first initial running him being not the first, but
like being more popular Black se Gril at that time.
But when his movie came out, he still carry the

(15:14):
iconic status of bringing in the community together. To go
see the thing and selling out and we're going to
see him four or five different times see in the
same movie and just really having that community around it,
and his actor actually brought a lot of that weight
to it, extra weight, so as well, Yeah, all right,

(15:37):
And I'm gonna say un controversial because I just gotta
throw a little controversy out there. I like the controversy.
I know people gonna hate me, but I'm wanna say
Black Panther beats Batman like any day of the week.
So he's gonna throw that out there.

Speaker 2 (15:51):
Not only he will beat him, he will mody wop him.
I'm backing you up on that, brother, he will wop him.

Speaker 1 (15:57):
No way.

Speaker 3 (15:58):
I don't care if Batman has like a whole week the.

Speaker 1 (16:00):
Plan, he's not like he didn't got he just don't
got the gout it. But that's a whole nother I
just had to a little controversy in there because Marcus
Marcus Nice, Marcus Nice when he did his thing, I
had to punch and arrow. I like it. I love it.

(16:23):
And Storm is on there. But Storm is there honestly
because once she's who I think of. But that's what
en when I think of like X Men, like X
Men that really handle stuff. She's gonn Maga level mutant.
She controls the weather to where they just worship her
a god. She I wish she would handle better in

(16:45):
the in her live action role. I think Holly Berry
did so that she could.

Speaker 2 (16:50):
And that looked just like that's another part. That's a
podcast one another day. To Ali Barry did oh man,
you gotta take your hat off?

Speaker 1 (16:59):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (17:00):
Yeah, God agree, And she even said that she was like,
I wish I could have brought more to that character,
because she says she did like a lot of research
on storm and stuff. Oh I'm still pissed about that,
but yeah, go ahead. That's another that's another podcast, another thing.

Speaker 1 (17:16):
And she's led the X Men at some points in
time too, so she's a leader and she's just a powerhouse,
so she has to be on the list. And plus
she's not the first, as Marcus says, she's not the
first female of black female superhero I said to him
and he said back to me. But when it comes

(17:36):
down to it, she's one of the ones you think
of when you think of black female characters, like first
one I can guarantee if to google it right.

Speaker 3 (17:45):
Now, you're gonna be at the top of the list.

Speaker 1 (17:48):
Half of that list. So his one that I think
you're gonna be surprised by put I'm putting Cyboard at
my number three. I like it. Yeah, And the reason
I'm putting Cyborg is because think about we were growing
up and think about Teen Titans. Was that guy okay

(18:13):
in that show. He is probably one of the main
reasons why I watched that show. The episodes were so
impactful and stuff like that. They were so like here
for us at another community, Like the one episode where
I think it was like they were he was talking
to a kid who had a propthetic or whatever like that. Yeah,

(18:36):
and that was an episode. And then the Starfire later
on was like you understand how it was another episode?
Take it back. It was another episode where like Starfighters
like being like profiled and he understood how she felt
and was able to bring him back. And we all.

Speaker 2 (18:50):
Said the one way he had a chance to become
like human again human for a day, but he was like, na,
this is who I am.

Speaker 1 (18:58):
Man.

Speaker 2 (18:59):
Yeah, that's a great one. And even in the comics now,
I think.

Speaker 1 (19:03):
He's one he thinks out.

Speaker 2 (19:04):
He's one of the first out of the Titans to
join the Justice League, right.

Speaker 1 (19:08):
I think I think he's probably.

Speaker 2 (19:11):
Only one. I feel, yeahs behind in the comics.

Speaker 1 (19:17):
So we don't know as far as our information tells us.
But I just think any of the power out from
the comics, like he like if it's technology, it's his.
No matter what technology is. He has boom tubes and
I think that's what they call where he's able to
telephone different things and the all. I think I think

(19:39):
he gives Brainiac a run first money don't quote me
on that, but I feel like I've heard that where
him and brainiactor here come to tech and stuff like that.
But yeah, I had to put cyberwork on there because
I had to different. I just think of cyber work
because when we were growing up, we had John Steer,
we had cybe work, we had static. We didn't have

(20:01):
I mean, we had paying Draft Panther, the Storm, but
we didn't like, we didn't have a lot of them,
you know what I mean.

Speaker 3 (20:07):
As far as like something we could watch, like we
could go on watch.

Speaker 2 (20:10):
Yeah, it's so crazy because when I think about it,
bro he he almost has been like around the whole,
like he's like phase of my life, those school, high school, college, adulthood.

Speaker 1 (20:24):
That's crazy.

Speaker 2 (20:26):
Shout out the sideboard man.

Speaker 3 (20:29):
Person was shout out the sideboard.

Speaker 1 (20:31):
Manby man, he's that guy.

Speaker 3 (20:34):
Man, that's a good one. That's a good one.

Speaker 1 (20:37):
I had to shake it up a little bit because
I knew our list would be pretty familiar. But let
me throw in there like a little curve ball. I
need to get the next one. You ain't know the
next one. You couldn't put him on your list, so
I did. I put Static a number first.

Speaker 3 (20:54):
That's why he was my unventure.

Speaker 1 (20:56):
I was like, I know, my boy got him on this.
I put him as far for sure, because one, he's
the most relatable, as you said, but also I feel
like Milestones in general needs to be on the mount
rushmore in general, just because of what they did for representation,
not only for a black representation, but all representation. When

(21:18):
you look at the blood stind the kid and the
milestone verset, like they were in their bag. It's just
it's stuck that they couldn't keep that going. But they
were in the bag when they made Milestone. Man.

Speaker 3 (21:37):
That's why.

Speaker 1 (21:38):
That's a why, Like I said, I couldn't it would
maybe be a dith honor on me if I didn't
put him on the list or Milestone is somewhere on
that list, because no matter what you look at the
book or the sadness and whatever it is, now, think
about what it did for in the nineties. They were
putting out characters better than DC and Marvel at the
time when it came to representation, and to be frank honest,

(22:01):
those characters are probably better than a lot of them
are now when it comes to the care that came down.

Speaker 2 (22:07):
Just reading that bible that Dwayne McDuffie came up with
for Milestone. It's just because I didn't watch those documentaries
and they was talking about it and it was like, man,
he had it like flushed out completely the whole not
just one character, the whole universe.

Speaker 1 (22:23):
And I was like, man, shout out to Dwayne McDuffie.
R P.

Speaker 2 (22:28):
I feel like if that dude, if he was still
alive today, I think Milestone, when they brought the Milestone
characters back, it would have been done totally different.

Speaker 1 (22:38):
Oh yeah, he would have tackled it a little bit
a static and Static would have a show by now,
Oh yeah, Static would have gotten show. He wouldn't have
Maken make appearance within the Young Justice and I really show. Yeah, honestly,
I went they were finding a way to make animated
film cinema out of universe for like Milestone, to bring

(22:59):
like New the movie or are Show or whatever and
have them all connected. That would be cool. Warner Brother,
I think you own them or whatever still or the
DC whoever it is, get on that like today.

Speaker 2 (23:12):
Or instead of them working on the Jason Todd and
Robin movie whatever.

Speaker 1 (23:19):
Oh yeah, look, I don't know what that is. That's
a whole other conversation because I got rat a little
bit about that. But I got my honorable mention. I
can say, I don't mention. It's not a surprise. It's
Miles for now. It's Miles, honestly, not for now, but
it's Miles. I can't think of anybody else he deserves
to be an honoration besides a person you said, which

(23:39):
is my first and from never FoST.

Speaker 2 (23:40):
You could have easily been on my list too. He's Annoyer,
He's considered Annoyer. Character got to ask slow. It's all
though generous.

Speaker 1 (23:50):
Honestly, if I would say, because I hope they do
better with now they're thinking about legacy characters. I guess
you would say I would love for the new Ironheart
show to do good because I need we need good
representation for her and a lot of action sense or
I know she has some good animated stuff, and I'm
not really too familiar with her character, but I think

(24:11):
she's how far. I like what she's been putting out.
Hopefully she can get on the in the same level
as like what mild handle. It came outround the same time.

Speaker 3 (24:20):
I was just it was like right there with each
other when it.

Speaker 1 (24:23):
Came Yeah, and I think I think her comics are
from what I know, from what I've done research on,
They're not bad or anything like that.

Speaker 3 (24:32):
It's a good story.

Speaker 1 (24:34):
It's just people are They don't like when things they're
changed to.

Speaker 2 (24:39):
Established characters, especially I say, especially when the character she
comes from was a a white male, so everybody freaks
out because it's a young black woman and it's not
even she's not even his replacement. So yeah, so it's like,

(25:00):
even with this show, they're clearly making it very clear
that she's not supposed to be taking Tony's place.

Speaker 4 (25:08):
Now, it's yeah, And like I was talking in the
group chat, it's like going to dock the Miles Miles
has He's been handled the best I think now if
they'd ever had his story is really good.

Speaker 1 (25:24):
Even in the comics. I love this news to the
to the ap Now, let's have all these like lines
on it. It's like red and blue and has like
different linings on it and stuff like that. That's tought
next time we do it. It's not different. I was
just gonna say.

Speaker 2 (25:41):
I was like, and it's so cool because it could
change over time. And it's as we're issue in these
new these new heroes that are coming along, even the
ones that are around, as their stories get better, like
the Monica, ram Bows, the Vixen, Mumble Beee Brother, Voodoo Blue,

(26:02):
Marvel Furry. Yeah, there's so many other characters. I come,
Rocket Girl, Moon Girl. That's and it's and that's that's
why we say it's our mount Rush. This is we think,
not because it's not to say, oh, we let them
off because they're not worth it enough. It's just it's
a lot of these characters still are new and they

(26:23):
still even the older ones, they still have time to grow.

Speaker 1 (26:27):
Yeah, and you said we could do this in three
more years, two more years, a year, and it can change.

Speaker 3 (26:34):
It could be a completely different list.

Speaker 2 (26:35):
Black Panther could not be the most popular superhero on
two more years change. So that's the thing about it.
It's a it's a it's a list that's interchangeable, so
it's not like permanent. And we got so much media
coming even with the new DC James Gunn versus. We're
gonna get to see a new Cyborg soon because they're

(26:58):
doing the Titans movie.

Speaker 1 (26:59):
So we say mister terrific too, which mister terrific.

Speaker 2 (27:04):
So it's starting to come and I know, I probably
I remember, I think I said this some years back
when we was on the podcast. It's happening, but it's
still like a slow burn. It's going taking that time.
But I'd rather have it than not have it. So
that's what makes it cool to do this like this.

(27:25):
And that's pretty much all I gotta say. You got
anything else to be.

Speaker 1 (27:30):
No, I think you said everything. I think the cool
thing about the period of time that we're in right
now allude to all the bigger, heavier stuff that's out
there in the world. Or we gotta deal with politics.
We representation is still flourishing and flowering even in this
time period, and I'm glad that we're getting into patients

(27:53):
where we're getting more characters that are from different walks
of life or different areas of we haven't touched, you know,
black characters and black women characters and all these things
are getting better writing and stuff like that. I think
we're in a good time for a representation, better than
we were when we were kids. Honestly, it's projecting like this,

(28:14):
but we're going up. So I think the years to
come or decades to come, when next generation comes up,
they'll have way more than we did. And that's great.
And I think we're doing a great job as not
only people who are creating it are talking about it,
people that are just enjoying it and just celebrating these things.

(28:35):
So I think everybody is doing a great job. All
these black people that are creating new black characters, are
writing for characters and stuff like that. I think they
do it. They're doing a great job and pushing a forward,
our character forward. So keep doing it. We're here, Well,
we will talk about it. We'll be here to talk

(28:56):
about it, so your spotlight. Yeah, We've had plenty of
great comics that have been on here. Black comic griders
that have been on here that have made a lot
of good stuff. Shut shut out there. Yeah, shout out
to Gigi for sure killing Queena horror. You know she
is killing it right now, man killing it going crazy.

(29:20):
So but that's all I got it. If you ain't
got no more, yeah, you don't have anything else, I'm
gonna close it on.

Speaker 3 (29:28):
You know what time it is, brother?

Speaker 1 (29:30):
It is the promotional.

Speaker 3 (29:34):
Hey my boy?

Speaker 1 (29:41):
All right, if you enjoy this podcast, when you enjoy
seeing our lovely faces, you can subscribe to the channel.
Hit the notification belt to get notified of our future video.
What's that comment about your not Rush Moore? If you agreed, disagreed,
or if you think it we're just crazy for putting
are putting cydework on the list because I never seen

(30:02):
nobody flipside, you know, or a crazy thing that black
Panther with Molly Wop. Batman no difficulty, by the way
I might even say it, I'm telling no difficulty. I
want to smoke, to be honest, Batman superpowers his writers.

(30:25):
But I'm just gonna be done after.

Speaker 2 (30:27):
That fire the night I think you said it.

Speaker 1 (30:38):
That's what I'm talking. You know what I'm saying I
mean to rough a little bit of Fellas tonight. You
know I'm here for it. Yeah, like prescribe, it hits
falls on all our socials, our Instagram, never X, never
that we have a discord. It's a description. We have
a reddit that's a description. I'm sure it's in a description.

(30:59):
If not, I ope thescription today. But that thing said
I'm your host, Dimitry, And this has been a tuarantum
of podcast. We are out. This is peace.
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