Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Fifty cent has been working on this documentary for almost
two years. The footage he has is insane. The people
he got speaking about Diddy is ridiculous. And on top
of that, the only place he agrees to do the interview, Rob,
if you can show this. He goes and interviews with ABC,
(00:20):
and there's an Instagram post he put up. Rob, I
don't know if you have that or not if you
go on his Instagram account. He goes and does the
interview about Ditty's documentary on ABC, and they say, the
reason why he did it on ABC, that's that one
right there, Rob, the one you had it on is
because ABC News station is one of only few stations
they're allowed to watch in prison.
Speaker 2 (00:45):
With that smile.
Speaker 1 (00:46):
So he wants Diddy to know the world is watching
you and what you did. So in a documentary. There's
a couple of things. I'll share with you guys on
what I took away from it. But Rob, maybe share
the clip on how he got access to some of
the footage of the documentary. Is this the one, Rob?
Speaker 2 (01:02):
Yep? Go forward?
Speaker 3 (01:03):
How did you get that footage of Ditty?
Speaker 4 (01:06):
I think that most journalists would not disclose this.
Speaker 5 (01:10):
Sources does he know y'all have this in the doc.
Speaker 2 (01:14):
I would doubt he knows.
Speaker 3 (01:15):
So when this airs, that'll be the first time that
his legal team didty that everybody knows that this footage
is now seeing the light of day.
Speaker 5 (01:27):
Perhaps Combs this team firing back in a statement to
NBC News, saying the Netflix so called documentary is a
shameful hit piece and that they relied on stolen footage
that was never authorized for release, sending a cease and
desist to Netflix.
Speaker 1 (01:41):
So that doesn't mean it's not true, of course, but
they relied on stolen footage, okay, is what they relied on.
Speaker 2 (01:48):
And then they.
Speaker 1 (01:49):
Ask about the history of fifty and him issued that
they've had.
Speaker 2 (01:53):
What's the one you just pulled up? Rob?
Speaker 5 (01:55):
This is where they talk about the feud, and then
I also have fifty cent talking about Ditty's reaction to
the documentary.
Speaker 2 (02:00):
Yeah, that's so funny. That is so funny. But watch
this one here, go ahead, go ahead, rap.
Speaker 6 (02:04):
How do you respond to people who say that that
it's more about the stain that you have for Sean
Combs than it is for giving the victims a platform.
Speaker 4 (02:12):
What they consider a pre existent bief right for twenty years, right,
is me being uncomfortable with him suggesting that he takes
me shopping? Or I looked at it like he was
like it was like a tester, like maybe you'll come
play with me type of thing, right.
Speaker 2 (02:30):
And it stop personal.
Speaker 7 (02:32):
I think it's important to also let people know that
the show is not completely the perspectives of people that
did not like Sewan. We weren't trying to just get
the highlights the salacious details. You know that the real
goal was to storytell and if you not, everyone needed
to have an allegation to be a part of this project.
Speaker 1 (02:52):
Yeah, I mean so that's that part, right, The fact
that he the feud with the two of them, Hey
let me take your shop, and like you say that
to a girl fifty? You talking about take me shopping?
How do you have to flip in mind? You want
to take me shopping? And then, last, but not least, Rob,
the other clip you have of a fifty is talking
about how he thinks fifty did he's gonna like this documentary?
Speaker 6 (03:11):
Go ahead, Rob, some Shawn Combs watches this, What do
you think he's gonna feel like?
Speaker 2 (03:16):
Wow, this is amazing.
Speaker 4 (03:18):
I think he's gonna say this is the best documentary
because you'll see people saying that he might feel a
different way about pieces and bits of it, but he
knows the truth. I think he'll see the truth in it.
Speaker 2 (03:30):
Okay, have you seen it?
Speaker 8 (03:31):
I saw the first ten minutes and I'm like, first
of all, I swear to you, I had no idea
it was fifties because the footage is very personal. In
the beginning where he's talking to his lawyer in a
hotel room live the person's recording it, and then across
from him in that in the building, there's cops looking
at the hotel room because I guess there.
Speaker 2 (03:49):
Was a warrant. Yeah, this is this is basically like
that scene.
Speaker 8 (03:53):
But let me ask you a question, Pat, and I
don't want you to have to give it away for
people who haven't seen it.
Speaker 2 (03:56):
What was one of the things that stuck out.
Speaker 1 (03:58):
To you where you were like, oh, well, I mean, listen,
I'm gonna say what I took away. You can go
do whatever you want to do and you still want
to watch it, So Rob, can you pull up the
characters that were in it. One of the guys was
a guy that owned twenty five percent of Bad Boy okay.
He owned twenty five percent of bad Boy when he
started bad Boy. It was between two guys. Okay, I
(04:20):
think the guy's name is Kirk Burrows. If I'm not mistaken.
Can you tap in Kirk Burrows to see the face.
Let me see if this is the one Kirk Burrows.
Speaker 2 (04:28):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (04:28):
Can you go to images to see if that's him
Kirk Burrows. Okay, so that's him. He owned twenty five
percent of bad Boy when they started bad Boy. He
puts twenty five under his name, seventy five under his
mother's name. That he does so, seventy five percent of
the company's under his mother's name, twenty five percents under
his name. One day, he comes up to him, fully
(04:49):
ready to take the sky out, says, you have to
sign off the twenty five percent to me. He said,
I'm not gonna do it. He says you have to
do it. He forces him to sign up and gives
away the twenty five percent over to Diddy. Okay, gives
away the twenty five percent to Diddy.
Speaker 2 (05:03):
That's his life.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
He threatens his life allegedly to give up the twenty
five percent, which ends up giving up to Diddy and
he says, I'm going to give it back to you
never gives it back to him. And then later on
when he takes him to court to say, this is
my twenty five percent, the court says, no, you have
mental issues. You having challenges here. This is out of control.
Boom did he ends up keeping the twenty five percent?
Nothing ever happens. He never gives the twenty five percent back.
(05:25):
This is the guy that was doing all the deals.
Speaker 2 (05:27):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (05:28):
But as you go through the story with with him
and the stories of the girls and what happened and
how he became super famous. Was that basketball game in
New York that he set up that nine people died
and he had to go in front of TV and
explain the fact that I was trying to put together
the greatest basketball game ever. It's called the City College Stampede.
(05:49):
Nine kids died.
Speaker 2 (05:51):
Did you did you? Have you heard about the story?
You've never heard about the story? Rock.
Speaker 1 (05:54):
Can you just go online and type in this this
is how did he became famous?
Speaker 2 (05:58):
What year was this? This is? This is? This is
did he's nineteen years old?
Speaker 1 (06:01):
If you just type in the City College, yeah, this
is this is thirty four years ago. Guys, exactly thirty
four years ago. Go to a clip of it, Rob
if you can just to show go to the cover
that page, Go to the cover that look at that.
Oh my god, eight crushed to death and ends up
becoming nine by the way, you true story. But if
you go and see if you can find a video
(06:22):
rob of what it looked like if you type in
on yeah, if you type in video.
Speaker 2 (06:27):
So, everybody's coming to this.
Speaker 1 (06:29):
Game, you know, all the major NBA, you know, all
the major rappers, everybody. Oh my god, it's gonna be great,
it's gonna be this, it's going to be that. And
in that image right to go to that image right
there with Diddy, you know the middle one, that's him
doing the press conference. He does the press conference on
that day at nineteen ish years old.
Speaker 2 (06:47):
Boom, he becomes famous.
Speaker 1 (06:48):
Wow, and he becomes He creates that rumor reputation of
he can put the biggest parties in the world and
people show up the biggest promoter. So that became a
way where his image got bigger and bigger and bigger
with this. And then when you continue, there's a part
with what he didn't like is that Tupac and Biggie
(07:09):
started getting very close because Tupac would allow Biggie to
open for him. So you guys have to realize I
had Greg Kating on the on the show ten years ago.
Greg Kating is the guy that was the lead investigator
of Tupac. He was in the documentary as well. He
was investigating what happened to. Uh yeah, he was investigating
what happened to and Rob, if you can pull up
the podcast with he and I and the way I
(07:29):
did it on the board. Then I put all the
suspects of who could have been and then he gets
the recording and shows But kif D kify D is
the guy that was the boss who did He allegedly
offered a million dollars. They said, I'll take a million
dollars to take both of them out, and he's saying
the recording, he's saying that to the feds. So right here,
(07:52):
if you zoom in on this list, rop can you
zoom it on the list?
Speaker 2 (07:56):
Okay?
Speaker 1 (07:57):
So if you zoom in, you see the bottom three names.
You see the bottom three names right there by his
right hand two pot right there. Yeah, that's kid is
right in the middle, the one in the to the
left is the guy that stole one of the death
Throw Records chains. Zooming a little bit, zooming a little bit.
You can't do it, Okay, no words. So the guy
(08:18):
in the middle is the guy that's having a conversation
who says, yeah, he offered us a million bucks to
take him out kid, and so they tried to get
the money. They're not able to kill boaths both because
he wanted them to kill both Shook and Pod in
the car. They only kill Pod and they don't kill Shug.
(08:43):
So allegedly they got paid five hundred thousand dollars. The
five hundred thousand dollars was paid to the gwand on
the right, all the way to the right, you see
the gun the right Corey, he's the one allegedly that
got the five hundred thousand dollars and that money never
went to KIFD or anybody else. The gan the left
of the one that stole the chain, which was a
(09:04):
death Row Records chain. That's a way of saying, I
got your rappers chain, because if you were one of
the guys death throw. So long story short, this whole
thing is in recording that he said this. So what
does did he do rob. Can you pull up this song,
It's a song called Black Rob featuring Mark Curry and
Mario Winnings. If you can just type in lyrics. Okay,
(09:30):
so he gets a million dollars. Can he go to
the lyrics and didd he's in the lyrics when he
gets started, go a little bit lower?
Speaker 2 (09:39):
Boom muscle. Can you type in the word in their rob?
Nice guy? Type control left? Nice guy?
Speaker 1 (09:49):
Okay, right there, Look at it's nineteen ninety nine. No more,
mister nice guy, been nice too long. I'm just gonna
start making y'all disappear.
Speaker 2 (10:00):
Man.
Speaker 1 (10:00):
First, I'm gonna take your records off the radio. Then
i'm gonna erase your social Security number, you know, take
your birth certificate out flies, I'm gonna do your whole
f and family. Ain't nothing but mercy. And then, by
the way, in the lyrics, he says, I'll drop a
million dollars on your head.
Speaker 2 (10:18):
To erase you.
Speaker 1 (10:20):
Can you type in I'll drop a million Just put
control f Just go to just go to Google and
type this out. I'll drop a million dollars on your head.
I'll drop a million dollars on your head and just
put it in. Next to it right there. See it
says Blackrop, what song came up? I'll drop a million
(10:41):
dollars on your head, erase you and your whole family.
Speaker 2 (10:44):
Biac.
Speaker 1 (10:45):
Wow, he's saying it in the song on what he
did to get rid of Tupac.
Speaker 2 (10:50):
What an idiot. He's saying this.
Speaker 1 (10:52):
Like that is the level of criminality, and I'm gonna
get away with it. Right one day, I'm at an
NBA game. This is two years ago, right before he
got arrested. I had done like three videos on Diddy.
He's at a game with one of his girls.
Speaker 2 (11:06):
He sees me. I see him. I listen.
Speaker 1 (11:08):
If there's a guy in the hip hop world I
cannot stand, is this guy. I'm looking at him, He's
looking at me, and then we're locked in. Vinnie, when
I tell you, we're locked in eye to I two
minutes and you're not breaking. Neither one of us are breaking.
And Oss, look, you don't understand. To me, Tupac was
a as a young kid coming up.
Speaker 2 (11:29):
He played a very big role as in painting. Yeah,
he's the most influential to me.
Speaker 1 (11:34):
That guy was a so to me, you took this
guy out, am I investigated a lot of people based
on the reports and things that we talked to a
lot of different people, it always comes back to Diddy
and more and more you put the stuff together. There's
another story about what happened with Biggie. So the same partner,
that guy that's a twenty five percent owner. So they say, Okay,
let's go to LA and let's do this torn La.
(11:57):
Biggie's like, there's videos of Biggest saying, man, I feel
like something's about to happen. I feel like someone's gonna.
Speaker 2 (12:02):
Take me out.
Speaker 1 (12:02):
He's supposed to go to LA and then right after LA,
he's supposed to go to UK for a tour.
Speaker 2 (12:09):
He's already got flight on everything booked. Did he calls?
Speaker 1 (12:13):
Uh, what's the guy's namewards on the right, the ards
Coorey Edwards. He calls him and he says, cancel his flight.
So what do you mean, cancel his flight? Cancel his flight.
I'm not canceling his flight. He's going to New York.
He's going to UK. Cancel his flight. So they cancel
his flight, Biggie stays and then he gets killed and
(12:37):
the rest is history. And by the way, he uses
that to come out and create that song every breath
and Sting performs it and he dances, of course, celebrating
the death, and he's praying to Biggie and he puts
the biggest funeral together. And guess who pays for the funeral.
He uses all the money from Biggie to pay for
(12:57):
biggest funeral. This guy is the biggest dirt bag out
there in this space, biggest dirt back. And I'm so
glad that what's his name did this? Fifty cent did this.
And by the way, if you're thinking that he's going
to take shots at Bieber and jal and any of
that or Leonardo, nothing like that happens in this documentary.
(13:19):
It's not that documentary. I think those guys were probably
protected to not show what the Bieber thingings and what
the other stuff is. But you really learned about You
really learned about this guy's character that ties with the
mom and who the mom wasn't beating him up, and
the dad being a former mobster. And they used to say,
is that dad was a former FBI informant working with
Frank Lucas. You know Frank Lucas from American Game. Apparently
(13:40):
Diddy's dad has ties to Frank Lucas. If you type
in Diddy's dad, Frank Lucas zooming a little bit rob
it was an associate right there. Diddy's father, Melvin Earl Comes.
Melvin was an associate of drug lord Frank Lucas. You know,
Frank Lucases two inner, seventy five million dollars. He was
(14:02):
going doing heroin and flying everything back. But allegedly did
He's dad was an FBI informants who he was? Okay,
allegedly did his dad was an FBI format So some
people are saying, maybe did he was protected all this
time because maybe he was also an FBI formant. The
guy said, he said, every room you went into, he
recorded everything. Every room you went into, he recorded everything.
Speaker 2 (14:22):
So listen.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
All in all, it's it's a great documentary to watch
if you're following. The only reason I followed the story
is because I only one guy. Only one reason I
watch the documentaries because I want to see what the
ties were with Tupac. And there's a whole section that
has to do with top Tupac, a whole section type
to Tupac.
Speaker 9 (14:42):
Anyways from here, because fifty head of this footage, somehow
we got this footage.
Speaker 2 (14:48):
Yeah, what was did he charged with? Meaning? What was
he found guilty of? Going to do? Four years? Were
going to be free?
Speaker 9 (14:55):
Which is so by the time there's another election, did
he's going to be free?
Speaker 1 (14:58):
And by the way, there's a whole section where they
interview the jurors.
Speaker 2 (15:03):
The jurors sided with Ditty. What do you mean?
Speaker 1 (15:06):
You have to see what they're saying in the documentary
they cited they sided with Ditty in what case because
they felt bad for him. They're like, they're just trying
to take advantage of him. They're trying to take money
from a rich guy. And that's all this is. It
is a conspiracy. He wouldn't do such a thing. The
jurors were siding with Ditty, Which it's a spectacle the guys.
(15:27):
By the way, the guy's gonna get out and he's
going to put a big party together and people going
to go to the party, and a lot of a
lot of baby old. By the way, there's a whole
story with the baby oil. Vinny the guy, the guy
who was the one that was hooking up with Cassie Welsh.
He was watching and they're going at it.
Speaker 2 (15:45):
I remember that guy. He talks about the whole.
Speaker 1 (15:47):
Thing and one time when Diddy was about to go
to kill him, killed Kid Cutty because Cassie ran away
to go hook up with Kid cutting He calls Cassi.
Cassie calls Ditty's assistant, whose mother used to be a
cocaine addict who died at a young age and she
had to take care of her. So she's like, I'm
used to personalities like this. This is Diddy's assistant. She
calls the assistant to say, I'm with Kit Cutty. He's like, listen,
(16:12):
Diddy can cheat on you. You can't cheat on Diddy.
He says, if he finds out, he's going to kill you. Well,
guess who finds out. Diddy finds out did, He grabs
a gun, says we're going together, tells the girl, takes
her to go to find Cassie because they're going to
kill Cassie. I mean, listen, Kit Cuddy and Cassie was
this nineteen year old coming up attractive, dropped at gorgeous,
(16:32):
and he was all what like, there's a whole part
about Diddy where he wanted to hook up with his
friends girls. Whoever his friend's girls were with, he wanted.
Speaker 2 (16:41):
Hook up with what about his friend's boyfriends?
Speaker 1 (16:44):
That comes later, but you know what he does. He
finds out who Shoog Shuog Knights Sidechik was in Atlanta.
He gives her fifty thousand dollars diamond ring to hook
up with Suge Knights because Shug was a boss of
death Row Records, and it's his way of saying, I
have to get even with Sugar buys a fifty thousand
dollars diamond ring or diamond necklace for this girl whatever too.
(17:08):
There's a lot to.
Speaker 8 (17:08):
It, and that you know that because he went to
member it was a hip Hop Source Awards or Sugar
went on stages like, hey, man, if y'all you'll want
you know, your producers dancing all.
Speaker 2 (17:19):
Row? Oh they hate Yeah, they hated it.
Speaker 1 (17:21):
And then Diddy gets up on stage and he says, listen,
I heard somebody says that if you don't want your
you know, just to get into videos. Here's what I'm
all about. I'm about all of us celebrating each other's successes.
And I just want to give a shout out to
all the winners tonight.
Speaker 2 (17:34):
And then behind closers is I got to take this guy?
Speaker 9 (17:37):
What do you think was I'm gonna bring up some lyrics.
What do you think was Diddy's motivation?
Speaker 2 (17:41):
Is it? Is it money?
Speaker 9 (17:42):
Is it power?
Speaker 2 (17:43):
Evil?
Speaker 10 (17:43):
Is it psychopathy? Is it machiavellianism? And envy? Control, envy,
control limelight? He has to be the face and nobody
can have it and me envy. He has to be
the face. He has to be the limelight. Nobody can
have it more than him.
Speaker 9 (17:59):
And obviously he's the reason that he became super super
seperate him is he was the producer for Biggie and
Biggie was Numero uno yeap more than two two about
the band?
Speaker 1 (18:09):
The guy who was partners with the guy that brought
him up type in Diddy's first mentor this is the
guy that did He went and worked as his assistant
at a young age, that took him in Andre Harrold,
who Andre Harrold takes him to the founder of Uptown Records.
And you know what Andre Harold does. He fires him
because he says Diddy's getting out of control, disrespecting me.
(18:30):
He fires Diddy and tells Diddy you can leave and
you can take only one client. And guess who he
takes The only client he takes is. He says, you
can take Biggie, nobody else is coming with you. He
allowed Diddy to leave with only big in. That's when
he starts bad Boy, and he gives twenty five percent
to that guy and seventy five percent to his mom.
Speaker 2 (18:47):
Interesting, this is the guy that mentored him, That's the
guy everybody wanted to work for. That's the twenty five
percent guy. No.
Speaker 1 (18:52):
Andre Harrold is the founder of Uptown Records, which everybody
was under.
Speaker 2 (18:56):
He mentored Diddy.
Speaker 1 (18:57):
And he's a legend and he became bigger than him.
If you know Andre Harrold, he's like a legit g
in this game.
Speaker 2 (19:04):
Well, back to the count.
Speaker 9 (19:05):
He thinks, if you want to if you want to
explore lyrics and be like, well, how literal are we
gonna take this?
Speaker 2 (19:10):
So you know the song that goes.
Speaker 9 (19:12):
Last night, couldn't even get an answer, trying to call great.
Speaker 2 (19:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (19:19):
At the end of the song, he's calling her through
the whole video lost, I couldn't get an answer. He
leaves her a voicemail. Do you know what he says
on the voicemail? Here it is right here. He goes, Hey,
what's up? I'm been trying to reach you all night.
This stuff ain't funny, not picking up my mother and
calls you better stop playing with these mother feelings.
Speaker 2 (19:39):
You know how much I love you? Right?
Speaker 9 (19:42):
Are they gonna get a completed second zone for a
couple of seconds, then I couldn't get in touch with you,
and I'm ready to move on, and I'm gonna shoot
the mother f up you, emma f and dumb beat.
Speaker 2 (19:51):
So this is a he's basically saying to his girl, Yo,
you don't pick up my call, I'm gonna come shoot
up your house. It's almost literal.
Speaker 9 (19:58):
We can take these these words, but certainly.
Speaker 1 (20:01):
When they're you know what it is, you know how,
you know how comedian, And sometimes when you get caught
when they try to get extremely analytical with database and
then somebody catches them, somebody super brilliant. I'm just a
comedian like Dave in here. What rappers can get to
get away with as what? This is entertainment. It's just
a So this is not real.
Speaker 2 (20:20):
I'm not I don't mean this. It's entertainment. It's just ramp. Tom.
You look like you want to say something. No, the
genre is.
Speaker 11 (20:28):
Not my lane. No, no, no, The genre is not my lane.
But it's really sad because you see it. You see
it the.
Speaker 2 (20:37):
Psychology of crime.
Speaker 11 (20:39):
You see it in so many other areas, that denial
of the narcissism.
Speaker 2 (20:42):
And stuff like that.
Speaker 11 (20:43):
You know, Elizabeth Holmes had it and defrauded one hundred
million dollars from investors, ended up in prison without like
the violence and the foreshadowing and the the tipping off
through the lyrics. You see the psychology of people who
you know, they get on that and they're gonna and
they're just that train. They're the head of the train
(21:04):
and they're going here. Nothing can get in front of it,
nothing can distract it. People are tossed off that that
don't that don't support it, and it's just it's a
psychology of crime.
Speaker 2 (21:14):
You know where I want to hear from Ray Dallio? Mmm, yeah,
because you know that they have a relationship.
Speaker 9 (21:21):
Radialia was kind of a mentor.
Speaker 2 (21:24):
Yeah to Diddy.
Speaker 9 (21:25):
I'm not saying anything legal, zero percent. I don't know
anything about that. He was a mentor of his. Because
Combs and Dahlio they were at some of the ward.
It was alphabetical here to go right here. The founder
of Bridgewater associates one of the richest men of the world,
Hedgephon Guy help him to advance his success to the
next level. Would love to hear what Ray Daly wants
to say on Diddy. Would love to hear it.
Speaker 1 (21:46):
If you love Christmas as much as we do. Okay,
we got three Christmas trees in the house. It's a
spectacle every Christmas one, you know, Thanksgiving ants that that
follow and Friday. I have to carry this ten foot
tree that weighs six hundred pound and the family waits
for me to come through and we get this big tree.
We put it in there and I go up the ladder.
And I'm telling you right now, every year I'm getting
(22:07):
closer to falling. Okay, I had it under control at
forty three, forty four, at forty seven, Vinnie, I am
so high. I'm so high that if if a little
bit it's slips, I'm falling on my back. We're doing
podcasts out of a wheel trap. Nobody's talk and it's
always like, can you put the star all the way
up top? I'm like all the way trying to put
(22:28):
this thing up. I think there's something going on, like
it's like an inside job. Listen, there's a story right there. No, no, no,
it's it's a blast. Obviously, everybody loves it, and Dylan
loves decorating the tree.
Speaker 2 (22:39):
I hope for those of you guys that do as well.
Speaker 1 (22:42):
We we love Christmas and our Christmas merchant is officially out.
And the hat that we couldn't keep a single one
of these guys were ordering fifty of these at a time, Rob,
can you zoom it on that hat? This hat was
such a massive hit last year. We sold three thousand
of them like this. They were gone, okay, and people
(23:03):
were buying it as Christmas gifts for others, and then
they were sending it to their clients their friends.
Speaker 2 (23:08):
It says Merry Christmas.
Speaker 1 (23:10):
Future looks bright on the bottom and on the side
with the VT logo. It's just a sick hat. We
got a few hats. One of the hats sold out.
This one that says Merry christ Christmas. This one sold out.
This one's gone. But you have the red one. You
have the green one to choose from, and then that
one as well. Rob, you have this one, this other
one we have as well. If you want to go
to this one, Rob, this Christmas on the bottom right, yeah,
(23:32):
right there, and then we have the Christmas if you
want to go and show Vinnie our model folks, look
at our models wearing there, and these come with a nice.
Speaker 2 (23:41):
Uh look at this, Look at this.
Speaker 1 (23:45):
This is the that's the pajamas, right, the Merry Christmas pajamas.
What the future looks bright. They're so super super comfortable.
Forget about the socks Vinnie's wearing that made it in there.
Those socks don't come with it, no, but they're modeling.
They look like a beautiful family. So if you want
your whole family to be wearing the pajamas the Merry Christmas.
(24:05):
We also got these sweaters here as well. Twitter, this
is sick. Go to v tamers dot com place your order,
and we decided for everybody that does it, we just
order a few thousand of these. You're going to get
the value team and Merry Christmas ornament that we're going
to give to you. End of item, The future looks bright,
Santa Claus, Merry Christmas with any order you place. Go
(24:28):
to v tamers dot com place your order and guess what,
Kamala Harris doesn't want you to say.
Speaker 2 (24:32):
Merry Christmas. And we don't mind saying it. Okay, we
don't mind saying it at all. Merry Merry Christmas to you.
Speaker 1 (24:40):
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