Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
Welcome to the first episode of "With All Sincerity, I'm your host, Mr. Sincere.
(00:07):
Let's go."
First let me start, give you a little bit of my backstory.
I'm born and raised here in Buffalo, New York.
I grew up on the east side, pretty much my whole life.
I moved out of the east side.
I was about what?
(00:31):
32, you know, got to a little bit of a better area.
And then pretty much, you know, had a decent upbringing in both parents in my life along with my little sister.
Then I met some friends along the way who became more than friends, so I refer to them as my brothers and sisters as well.
(00:59):
And I'll be 42 God willing in July.
So here I am.
I started a business.
In December of 2023, December 8th to be exact.
(01:23):
The name of my business is SincereVision LLC.
And that's how this podcast is being presented from SincereVision.
And my reason for starting a business was financial freedom, being my own boss.
You know, I still work a job currently, but eventually as my business grows, I could, you know, soon leave the, you know, my current job, which I'm a cleaner.
(01:52):
And I've been for a little over 11 years now, a cleaner at a college.
Once I leave that, then I can have this solely as my job, which really you can't call it a job because if it's something you enjoy, something you love, your passionate about is not a job.
So, you know, there's that.
And also too, obviously, as I said previously, you know, being my own boss, you know, financial freedom and things, but also my parents who have both been retired for quite a while to give them a much better life.
(02:30):
Give us all a better life, but especially them for all the hard work they've done for so long. And, you know, just give them the piece of heaven on earth, if you will.
Until they, you know, leave this earthly plane.
So that's another big part of my motivation as well as my other loved ones, my little sister, my nieces,
(02:59):
My friends, I consider brothers and sisters as well, you know, we're all family, you know, that's why, like I said previously, I do not call them my friends they are my brothers and sisters.
So, to, you know, inspire them, but also, you know,
I don't want to say assistance, if you will, if they're trying to open their own business or something. I could be that person to, you know, support them, invest in them, you know, because I didn't have that.
(03:37):
I started this business on my own, but did all, all myself, you know, my own money, you You know, with everything. So as I ascend and get successful, they won't have to go as hard as I did.
I can assist them so that we all can be bosses. We all can win. We all can be successful. And that's the goal. I want us all to win, but not just for financial gain and material things and stuff like that.
(04:02):
I also want to help other people as well. So that's my thing with that. So let's talk a little bit about the NBA playoffs. Like this for me, this is the most exciting NBA playoffs, in awhile. The NBA now is, they pretty much turned it into entertainment pretty much.
(04:26):
You know, it's just entertainment. And I just, you know, like with the, in season tournaments, like, come on now. Like, it's not, it doesn't feel like, you know, hardcore basketball, you know, they change a lot of the rules that are like terrible, you know,
(04:54):
it's way easier to score, defense is not an emphasis, but if you notice during the playoffs, big men can be big men, defense can be played more freely in the playoffs, you know, and that's not by coincidence.
And the Knicks, the Knicks are doing their thing. I mean, they lost last night. So, I hope they could pull it off in game seven. You know, Brunson, Jalen Brunson is, it's a killer.
(05:26):
That dude is a stone cold killer. And in my opinion, even if he didn't win the MVP, he should've at least been one of the finalists and he wasn't, he wasn't even a finalist as MVP, the MVP states the most valuable player, meaning most valuable player to your team.
And I feel that, and many others feel he was the most valuable player of his team, but, you know, he didn't become a finalist. They gave it to Jokic again and Jokic is could very good. I'm not shitting on Jokic at all.
(06:00):
No hate on him or nothing like that. Or they could have gave it to SGA of the Oklahoma City, sorry, Oklahoma City Thunder because he's fantastic.
You know, he's, he's smooth. Excuse me. And they have a great young team, you know, and they're in a tough series with, who are they playing?
(06:29):
Oh, Dallas, yeah, they're in the tough series with Dallas. They're were looking good too. The T-Wolves, they looked like they were going to sweep the Nuggets and then, you know, now they're going to a game seven. And in a way, I guess that's something you do want. You want, you know, competitive basketball because it's very exciting. It all is.
(06:50):
And Anthony Edwards, he's only 22 now. That, that young man is the truth. That, that guy is the truth, man. He's clutch. This game seven, how he performs and if they win, this will put an early definition on his legacy.
So he can have a great performance and they win to go to the Western Conference finals. This is going to put him well on his way to being one of the greatest of all time.
(07:19):
But yeah, I'm loving the NBA playoffs. Hope you guys are too.
Let's talk about this next thing.
P. Diddy. P. Diddy. We've heard rumors and people made jokes, you know, and some things he's done right on camera that really kind of, you know, added, you know, fuel to those rumors and people got to understand the thing about a rumor what makes a rumor a rumor.
(07:48):
Is a, there's some truth, there's some validity to what's being said. So, but, uh, man, that video with Cassie, it was, uh, what was it, they did on a March 15th, uh,
excuse me, March 5th, 2016. So that means that video was, uh, has been around for a very long time and the people that gave it up, I'm guessing the security team or whatever.
(08:23):
Let's be real, y'all, they didn't give up that tape for free. They sold it to CNN or whoever. Excuse me if you hear that sound in the mic. That's my chair I'm sitting on.
But, um,
he paid them 50 grand. Now, that tells you how messed up people are. You seen this on security cameras. So when she tried to when she left and then was scared about how he would react and tried to come back.
(08:58):
And they told her to go back. So I mean, you knew the danger. You were aware, but you still took that money. Suppressed that video.
You didn't try to help her. Nobody intervening came out or anything. Let me just, uh, uh, read this, uh, to you guys. Okay.
A 2016 surveillance video obtained exclusively by CNN shows Sean Diddy Combs, Grab Shove Drag Kick, his then girlfriend, Cassie Ventura during an altercation that matches allegations and a now settled federal lawsuit filed by Ventura in November.
(09:34):
The footage compiled from multiple cameras dated March 5, 2016 appears to show the rapper producer and business mogul during an incident that according to Ventura's complaint occurred at the now closed InterContinental Hotel in Century City Los Angeles.
CNN verified the location based on publicly available photos of the former hotels interior.
(10:01):
In the video, Ventura execs, excuse me, exits the hotel room and walks to, uh, to a bank, elevators.
Hold on.
(10:23):
Where did I leave off? I'm sorry. Okay, here we go. Combs holding a towel around his waist. Yes, he had a towel. So he was naked under there. Now, in my opinion, from the, uh,
the lawsuit she filed in November, he could have just got done, um, you know, uh, R wording her. I'm saying R word because I'm, you know, I will be, you know, I don't want to mess with any guidelines, because things are so sensitive now. So you know, you guys know what I mean when I say R word, uh, R wording her or he was in the shower or something previously or
(11:09):
I don't know, but, uh, combs holding a towel around his waist runs down a hall after Ventura. He grabs her by the back of the neck and throws her to the floor still holding his towel, grabbing clothes, in the one hand, he turns to kick her the video shows.
As Ventura is on the ground, Combs retrieves a purse and two case from the floor near the elevators. He turns around and kicks Ventura again as she lies motionless on the floor. Now if you watch the video, the way she lies down motionless, you could tell she's been beat previously before. So she figured, let me lay here like this motionless. He maybe won't do anything else to me, because he kicked her looks like in the, um,
(11:53):
in the behind area, watch, she's laying down, he like, like kicked her like almost like a punt, like he kicked her like a just angry kick. Then he picks up the, uh, her clothes and stuff that she was trying to leave out with, because she, I think she didn't have any, um, shoes on or socks. He had on, um,
just a towel and socks and then he stomps her a quick like stomp. Then he tried to, you know, drag her and then he, I guess either stops or she said something because there's no audio, it just, it just video, there's no audio.
(12:25):
And, um, excuse me. She gets up.
He walks down back to that hotel room to take her stuff back to the hotel room. Uh, I'm gonna get into this next, but I'm just kind of, you know, give you guys, you know, a little, you know, prelude.
(12:46):
And then, uh, he comes back when she tries to get on the phone and then that I guess call for help or call for a cab or something.
He comes back shoved her in the corner. Then he throws, um, it looks like a, a vase like you can see on the big mirror on the video.
(13:08):
You can't see her. You know she's in the corner, but you can't see her and he's sitting there and he takes a vase and it looked like he said something sitting there.
Then he's throws a vase at her and then, um, yeah, it was crazy. I've seen a lot of disturbing videos in my time. I've seen, uh, people getting shot, uh, murdered things like that.
(13:32):
You know, all types of crazy stuff. You, you've seen probably on, if I don't know if any of you remember Live Leak.
I don't know if you guys some of you old enough. I'm pretty sure you are, um, Banned From TV.
Remember that you could buy it back then or VHS tapes, you know, stuff like that. But this is up there with a lot of disturbing stuff I've seen.
(13:55):
And then you see a lot of disturbing up to that anyway. You see it all on the internet. You know, it gets out, you know, Reddit stuff like that.
But, uh, let me get back to, uh, where I was.
Hey, where did I leave off? I said, yes, as a, as Ventura is on the ground, Combs retrieves the purse and suitcase from the floor near the elevators.
(14:18):
He turned around and kicks Ventura again as she lies motionless on the floor.
About four seconds transpired between the two kicks according to the video. Then he then briefly drags Ventura by her sweatshirt toward the room before walking away.
Ventura is then seen slowly standing up. She gathers items from the floor and moves to pick up a phone on the, on the hallway wall near the elevators.
(14:45):
Combs still in a towel and socks returned, a mirror directly across from security cameras as I was describing to you guys previously.
Combs appearing to shove Ventura.
Seconds later, he sits down on the chair, grabs an object off the table and forcefully throws it toward Ventura.
Combs is seen walking away, then turns toward Ventura once again when an elevator door opens and someone appears to exit.
(15:11):
Now, I don't, I don't remember seeing that on the video, uh, anyone coming out of the elevator.
I don't, maybe I missed it for something. I don't know Ventura.
Who reached an undisclosed settlement when Combs declined to comment on the video obtained by CNN. Ventura's attorney Douglas H. Wigder
excuse me, Wigdor, said the gut-wrenching video has only further confirmed the disturbing and predatory behavior of Mr. Combs.
(15:39):
Words cannot express the courage and fortitude that Ms. Ventura has shown in coming forward to bring this to light.
CNN has reached out to representatives for Combs for comment. Combs has previously denied Ventura's allegations.
Now, into Ventura's lawsuit. Cassie for those who don't know who I'm talking about Cassie.
(16:05):
Her lawsuit Combs and Ventura, a model and singer known for songs like "Me & U" were in an off-and-on relationship from 2007 to 2018.
The two were photographed together at the Los Angeles premiere of a film, "A Perfect Match" on March 7, 2016.
(16:27):
So this was two days after the incident.
According to Ventura's complaint, which cited the altercation as occurring around March 2016, Combs became "extremely intoxicated and punched Ms. Ventura in the face giving her a black eye."
After Combs fell asleep, Ventura attempted to leave the hotel room, but he woke up and "followed her into the hallway of the hotel while yelling at her."
(16:57):
The complaint said he grabbed her, he grabbed at her and then took glass vases in the hallway and threw them at her, causing glass to crash around them as she ran to the elevator to escape the complaint alleged.
After Ventura got in the elevator, her complaint states that she took a cab to her apartment, upon realizing her running away would cause Mr. Combs to be even angrier with her and completely stuck in his vicious cycle of abuse.
(17:31):
Ventura returned to the hotel with the intention of apologizing for running away from her abuser, the complaint claims.
The complaint said that the hotel had seen security footage showing Mr. Comb's beating Ventura and throwing glass at her in the hotel hallway.
(18:01):
"You come back, because you see the danger and all that stuff, to go back. But while this was happening, and I'm not playing like I know everything because I wasn't there, but I worked in the hotel before."
Security is around, so if you saw that, no one attempted to do anything, no one tried to protect her, do anything. And we know why.
(18:36):
Either they were scared of this guy, or the so-called power that he supposedly had, or they could have been told by their superiors in the hotel, not to intervene, or what? I don't know.
I'm just assuming, like I said, I don't know everything, but you saw this. No one attempted anything. What if he would have killed her? Then what?
(19:02):
What if he would have put her in a coma? Then what?
So, to me, the people, the hotel, even though it's closed now, and security, all of them, everyone at that hotel, that staff should be held accountable, and they should be in that lawsuit as well, in my opinion.
(19:24):
The complaint alleges, "Combs paid the InterContinental Century City, uh, $50,000." Yeah, you heard me right. $50,000.
For the hallway security footage of the incident, the incident was part of a number of allegations made in the November lawsuit in which Ventura claimed she was raped in 2018 and subjected to years of repeated physical and other abuses by combs.
(19:52):
Now, here's my thing with that. He gives them $50,000, right?
Obviously, to get the tape and to destroy evidence.
First of all, he has to be very naive or stupid to think that they gave him the actual footage. But see, that's, I guess that's probably how power drunk he was, that he was, you know, was God complex.
(20:17):
You know as well as I do, if they gave him that tape, they gave him a copy. They kept that tape for themselves, you know, for insurance purposes, like if maybe if they wanted to make some money, like you see, you see the tape got out, right?
And whoever sold that tape, they probably got paid a good amount of money for that tape holding it for, for what, was it eight years?
(20:41):
So come on now, like people make me sick, man, that's why I don't, I don't care for people as much. Like I, you know, I, I help a lot of people always helped a lot of people, but there's a lot of just, like fucked up people out here.
A lot of people twisted with, with just twisted thinking twisted intentions, like come on now.
(21:04):
Now I could easily say what I would or wouldn't do if I was there, but I know me and I know what I'm about. I ain't rich, not even close. I'm not rich at all.
But there's, first of all, there's no way if I was a patron in that hotel and I seen or heard that that I wouldn't intervene or say something. I don't care who he is.
(21:26):
I'm not painting my picture as a tough guy or, not at all, but at the same time, something like that. I don't care who he is. I see that. What if that was my, one of my sisters, what if that was my mother?
What if that was one of my nieces?
What if that was your mother, sister, nieces, girlfriend, wife? And some man or someone was doing that to them because they have a certain status or whatever, or maybe you, maybe you are scared.
(22:00):
I don't know. You're not going to do anything?
And it doesn't necessarily have to be physical, but you're not going to do something to intervene. So that person doesn't further get injured or further get hurt.
Ask yourself that. Like I said, I know what I'll do. I can't say what any of you would do or anyone else but I know what I'll do. And that's disgusting. He was able to pay you off $50,000.
(22:21):
And it ended up coming out anyway, but $50,000 to keep that hush, are you serious?
Anyway, Ventura, who was formerly signed to Comb's label claim in her suit that he exerted his power and influence over her throughout the course of their relationship.
(22:44):
Well, professionally and romantically according to the complaint she was 19 when they met and Combs 37 and their business relationship lasted until 2019.
Here's my thing about that.
Yes, 18 is legal. Age of consent, right? She's consent, consenting. But he's 37 at the time, 37.
(23:15):
What damn of business does a 37 year old man has to do with that, excuse me, 19 year old woman, I was about to say 18, but 19 year old woman. Come on now. Come on. Are you kidding me? Are you kidding me?
When I was 37, I wasn't messing with 19, not even 21 year old women.
(23:39):
I was messing with and dealing with adult women, my age, or a little younger, something like that, but not 19..come on.
You already know what that is. And for those who don't know, you young ladies that are listening.
A man that old trying to get with you its not for nothing good. It is for control in a sense to where he knows even if you're way smarter than him as far as the books, school.
(24:11):
He has life experience on you. He has sexual experience over you. He has just a ton of experience over you. And that is why it is this predatory behavior.
It is, this predatory behavior. Either he's trying to get with you because you know he can get over with you more than what he could with most women, his age, older, they're not going for that bullshit.
(24:35):
He knows because you are young he can manipulate you and things. Or it can be more sinister plans like you have a lot of these older men that will get with you young girls, especially if they have money or some type of status or something.
Wine and dine you, there's been movies on it shows everything. So this is not something that's made up. They do all that. And then they show their real plans where they're trying to sex traffic you. They're pimping you or whatever.
(25:03):
And then you got something to go even further. They will get you pregnant pretty much mess up your life. Not saying that a baby messes up your life. But at that age, you really shouldn't be pregnant because you're not..
First of all, you're you don't even know what you want to be yet. You don't know who you are yet.
And they get and I've known females that I've spoken with and consulted and things.
(25:28):
Counseled if you will. Then there've been situations like that younger than her 16. That's the thing that goes on a lot in the neighborhood, you know, and black neighborhoods.
You got these guys grown as men dating 15, 14, 16 year old girls getting pregnant and everything then eventually they leave the girl alone.
(25:51):
She has a baby, but now her life is messed up now. She can't really do a lot of things that maybe she should have been able to do. She has a baby, she has other complications, things like that.
And the bottom line is bottom line is it's just not right. It's not.
It's not it's not it's not cool. It's not right. I don't care if it's legal. It's not right. That's a red flag right there. And then my thing is where were her parents?
(26:20):
Like what what where were her parents? Because both her parents are alive and in her life where her parents?
Because as far as I know any any parent my parent other parents, they don't care who you are. They will go to they will go to hell and back for their kids.
Now yes, in some situations when your dealing with women as well as young men or whatever they can get with someone that's not right for them.
(26:47):
And just messed up and as a parent, even though she's not like really a full blown adult. She's a young adult. She's considered one, stuff like that.
They can't really stop you from dating. They can try it, but usually what it does is it pushes that person closer to their abuser or whatever.
(27:11):
Still like if that was my daughter like again, I can only say what I would do. First of all, that's my daughter. I'm going to be involved in some in some way all around.
The first one when I would have seen the he's 37. That's a wrap right there. Like what are you doing talking to my daughter? Naw gone somewhere and what people don't like to talk about.
(27:35):
She was with what's his name Ryan Leslie. She was 18. I think she was with him around him.
Even before that before the age of 18 because if I'm not mistaken.
Don't quote me on this, I believe. Either Ryan Leslie or was it Puffy that discovered her in a club singing, but right. I think it was Ryan Leslie because he had her first and was doing music with her.
(28:09):
And he was so distraught when Diddy. He took him from her. He took her from him.
I think he quit music altogether and I heard something. Don't call me on this either that he blew up Ryan Leslie's car or what's it?
(28:32):
Kid Cudi's car he blew up that he had blown up that we heard in somebody lawsuit or whatever.
Because I know they hung Wale they were about any or whatever, but yeah, and this is another thing that we need to discuss too.
Just get off P. Diddy for a second. All through music. Hip hop, rock, all that.
(28:58):
All these men have been dating under age girls. Have we forgot about Elvis Presley and Priscilla? Have we forgot about that?
I don't know. Right. Who else? So Jay Z. Allegedly Jay Z and Foxy Brown. He got her pregnant at like 15 or 16.
(29:24):
That ain't cool. And then he has a ton of illegitimate children that he doesn't want anything to do with. He gives them money or whatever.
He's like leave me alone. Like really? Who else? Who else? It was rumored that Jay Z was dealing with Aaliyah who also was under age at the time.
(29:58):
Hold on one second. I'll be right back. Give me one second.
[typing sound effects]
(30:21):
Okay, sorry guys, I'm back. I had to fix some technical issues, but back to what I was
(30:46):
saying. There's been a ton of men in the music industry dating under age girls. Some were
public, some were not, but people, you know, later, you know, told the stories. And it's
(31:06):
not cool. It's not cool. In the professional world, it's not cool out here in the regular
world with "regular joes." It's not cool. It's wrong. It's disgusting. It's
disgusting. 37, she's 19 and Ryan Leslie. I can't prove it, but the way he acted when she
(31:28):
was no longer with him, you were dealing with this young lady too. And more people can tell
you better than me that been in the industry or around people in the industry, they groom
these young girls, whether they're video girls, whatever. And it's disgusting. But let
me get back to where we were. In detail, all right, where did I leave off. Yes, their
(32:00):
business relationship ended in 2019. In detail, claims that Combs was physically violent
toward Ventura and forced her to engage in various sex acts with other men during that time.
Ben Brafman. An attorney for Combs said in a statement to CNN on the day, it was filed
(32:21):
Mr. Combs vehement, vehemently denies these offensive and outrageous allegations. But then
this video comes out like he did not, I didn't do this. I didn't do that. Like come on.
The suit was resolved the following day. Yeah, the following day, as soon as that suit came
out, he paid her an undisclosed amount of millions. Now they claim that didn't show
(32:48):
any admission to wrongdoing. If if you have a ton of money and you, someone accused you
of something and you know you didn't do it, why would you pay them a boatload of money? Knowing
that you probably have more money than them so you could fight the case longer than they
can. So why would you do that if you didn't do anything wrong? And then obviously this video
(33:11):
comes out to prove it doesn't show everything she talked about, but come on. You see the video
and you suck out. You can look at the body language, everything. There's no audio, but you
can see everything like come on. And then let's not forget to mention
that they say that Kim Porter God rest her soul, he was beating her and abusing her. That
(33:36):
was widely known. His mother of his first set of children. She was on the Biggie video,
she had the blonde hair and they were in the hot tub on the Big Poppa video. I think she's
on a couple other videos. I've forgot her name. It escapes me. He was beating her as well. So he has
(33:57):
a history of this beating and going crazy on women. So a decision to settle a lawsuit especially
in 2023 is in no way an admission of wrongdoing as I said earlier, Brafman told CNN in a statement
at the time, "Mr. Combs decision to settle the lawsuit does not in any way undermine his flat-out
(34:20):
denial of the claims. He is happy. They got to a mutual settlement and wishes Ms. Ventura the best."
the best. Details of the settlement were not disclosed as I said previously, you know,
the undisclosed amount, but you know what's probably for some money. But No amount of money,
she gets will ever undo the abuse and stuff that she stated in the lawsuit that she dealt with
(34:46):
all those years and the scars. I believe she's it was reported that she has way
subscribed. She has nightmares and things so and she has a new life now. She has I think a kid or two
with this guy she married after she left Diddy, I think they're married. Don't quote me on that.
Yeah, but the scars are going to be there forever. The damage is done. Now on to a more
(35:20):
issue since November, Combs has faced five other civil lawsuits accusing him of a range of sexual
misconduct and other illegal activity. He has denied the allegations and the cases remain active
because he hasn't been charged with anything people. He hasn't been criminally charged with anything
and nothing like that. He's been accused so he hasn't been criminally charged or nothing. So,
what those of you don't know. Authorities searched combs homes in California and
(35:47):
Florida in April as part of a federal investigation carried out by the Department of Homeland Security
Team that handles human trafficking crimes according to a senior federal law enforcement official
briefed on the investigation. The investigation stems from many of the same sexual assault allegations
put forth in the civil lawsuits according to a second law enforcement source familiar with the searches.
(36:14):
Aaron Dyer, an attorney for Combs, issued a statement at the time calling the searches a "gross
overuse of military-level force." This is unprecedented ambush paired with an advanced coordinated
media presence leads to a premature rush of judgment to Mr. Combs and is nothing more than a
witch hunt based on meritless accusations made in civil lawsuits, he said. There has been no
(36:40):
finding a criminal or civil liability with any of these allegations. Mr. Combs is innocent and will
continue to fight every single day to clear his name. Now,
to add on to that. Now, they're saying he, uh, which he is like anyone else, you're innocent to
(37:06):
proven guilty even with that video, even with allegations and other things in America and the
court of law, you are innocent to proven guilty. Okay. Then there was, uh, in his homes, he had
surveillance everywhere, footage. They said damaging footage of everyone that intended his parties
(37:34):
or as people and people sometimes are called freakoffs, you know, you know, weird stuff would go on.
Then there's the disturbing audio that some bodyguard claims, he recorded as allegedly supposed to be
Meek Mill and Diddy having sex, very disturbing audio.
(37:59):
Now those of you who are familiar with Jaguar Wright, who's been talking for years about P. Diddy
and many others and she recently, um, was on a YouTube I saw earlier on our Real Lyfe Street Stars channel.
Talking about it further, um, they said these are, they're multiple people doing damaging things on
(38:28):
these surveillance videos. So they're saying people are saying allegedly that, that uh, raid wasn't for him.
It was for the higher ups that are above him. See, he has no real power. Have you, if you guys
follow what over last year that you found out he didn't really own to Siroc like a lot of these guys,
they don't own these liquor companies. They promote the liquor to us to the black community and
(38:51):
everyone else, but they don't really own the liquor. He uh, I forgot the one company he had sued and
right after he sued them, then he dropped the lawsuit because I guess he wasn't being compensated
what he was supposed to be compensated because I think, uh, either there was audio or it just got around.
He was bragging to people. "I don't spend my own money" and then not too long after that, all this
(39:15):
stuff comes. So and what I think is what they do with a lot of people because what he is is a gate
keeper. That's what he is. He's a gatekeeper. When he bites, when they bite the hand that feeds them,
the people who are the gate above you that let you do all the, you know,
(39:36):
the fuck shit and all that, let you do all that stuff. Once you bite the hand that feeds you,
you step out of line. Now they're like, okay, yeah, we're going to show you all right, we're not going
to protect you anymore. And now the floodgates open, this video comes out, other stuff comes out,
you know, he's, uh, he ran for a minute, then he's back. You see what, uh, what Russel Simons did,
(40:02):
with his allegations and things like that. He went all the way to Bali because they cannot extradite
they have no extradition laws there. So he's safe over there. They cannot extradite him back to America.
So this is crazy and it's going to continue to unravel further with P. Diddy and, uh, P. Diddy and
(40:24):
anyone like him that are doing these things to people, violating people physically, abusing that
power all, all these things, they need to be got, but here's the problem with that. As I said earlier,
you're going to the gatekeepers, you're not going to the gate. What about the people above him?
That they're really pulling the strings and doing things. What about those people? That's what you need
(40:50):
to get, if you want to get them, get them all, but that's not how it works. You know, that's why they're
in the positions they are for a reason. They're pretty much, and it is chose untouchable, but the
little gatekeepers that we think have all this power and so strong, they're really not. You see,
what's happening to him now. You see what happened to R. Kelly. R,Kelly is not even in prison
(41:15):
for what he did and was doing with these young girls. People knew it. People that work with him knew it.
Everyone knew it for a long time. He's even low-key bragged about it.
So people knew something was wrong when he married Alia at 15 and then they
(41:41):
know the marriage for something after a while. But yeah, people knew something was wrong then.
But people just turned it. When that tape came out, when the tape came out with a young girl,
and the main reason he got off, because when she was at court, she was grown, because that does the
fact things like you look older than what you are now. You know, that silly stuff. He got off of 21
(42:05):
counts. That's because his power was still strong. He was still able to be used. But people have said
on many interviews that on the inside of the situation said once he started seeing that the powers
that be were still in his music and putting it out without permission and then he also asked about
his masters. Once he did that, he overstepped. Now he's dealing with what he didn't with. He just lost
(42:30):
an appeal to recently. But at the same time, probably Weinstein, they closed all his counts,
whatever, except for one. When many people came forward, he did see the difference.
(42:52):
You see the difference is different. It's different when you got the
complection for the protection. It's not fair across the board. They all should be got. They all
should be under the jail, in my opinion. But that's not how it works. And then these fools
need to learn that you go selling your soul. What are things going to happen? That was going to
(43:19):
come to collect eventually. What's the old thing here? You get by but you don't get away.
And if you don't come out in the wash, it's going to come out in the rinse, but eventually it's all
going to get cleaned. So there's that. And yeah, it's crazy. It's going to continue to unfold.
(43:43):
It's just crazy. I feel for a Cassie. I feel for Kim Porter, God rest her soul. And then
then the stainless steel. You get Diddy's son, King Combs. He came up with his wack ass
diss track to a 50 cent and other people. And then one of the lines he, I believe he says,
I'm paraphrasing a bit because he said they rated the house, but we own house or
(44:13):
whatever is in the other stuff in the house next door, you sound stupid. You sound stupid. And
I understand that's his father because also he's in some allegations as well. I believe some
young man got shot in the abdomen in the in a recording studio. Then some young lady was assaulted
(44:38):
on a boat on an island somewhere. So there's a lot of stuff coming out, a lot a lot of ridiculous things
and it's just disgusting all around. Like a lot of people are saying that Jay Z is next. I don't know
how true that is. It's that, you know, I don't know. I don't know. I'm not an entry. You know, I don't
know. Sometimes you can speculate, but I don't know anything. But it's crazy. It's crazy. But
(45:06):
in conclusion, the industry is crazy. When I was a kid, I wanted to be, you know, in music, rap, or
produce. And then as I saw how things worked, because my father was in my studio, my grandfather
(45:31):
was in music. His name was Frank Brunson. He had a group called The People's Choice. He told me
some things about some people of the past and stuff like that. And then other things I would read
about and I would hear from other people that were insiders in the music industry. And then seeing
stuff unfold for myself with my eyes with the music entry. I was like, yeah, I don't think I want to
(45:57):
be a part of that. And if I was, I definitely want to be somebody in the background, you know.
You know, and eventually I probably wouldn't stay long anyway, because you hear some stories of
producers, artists you don't see anymore, stuff like that. You see some disturbing things. And
(46:18):
I'm definitely not getting down to get down. I'm not going to know those rare parties where you
got to turn in your phone or sign the NDA. Like if I'm signing the NDA, what is going on here?
You know, something like that? No. Like I don't want to be a part of nothing. I don't party like that
(46:42):
anyway now. No, I don't. I don't, I don't even care being around a lot of people at times, depending on
the on the event of something other than that. I know, no, it ain't for me. You know, and then I'm
very vocal, very blunt. I mean, that's why my, my business is called SincereVision, because sincere is
(47:03):
when the many monikers I earned because of my honesty and sincerity and stuff. So I'm not going to
be quiet about something and I'm not going to not intervene on something. So once being hurt, a woman,
you know, being assaulted is no way. There's no way. So
and then these days being a rapper, even if you're mostly if you're a street rapper, gangsta rapper,
(47:32):
Drill rap, drill rapper, that drill rap, that is, that's a spirit. That's a spirit being spoken
through the speakers. And a lot of people don't know one of the names they call the devil is the
a master of the airwaves. And because remember the devil was what he was in charge of, you know,
(47:59):
the music in heaven. So and and I'm not, I don't believe in any religious dogma I'm not a Christian,
I'm not Muslim or anything like that. Excuse me. I'm sorry. I know that there's a God.
Sure say I know there's a devil and it's evil all around, but I follow no organized religion.
(48:23):
But that drill music is a spirit. I mean, look at some of the the content they talk about. Most
people would say, oh, they're speaking their lives. And there's nothing wrong with speaking your life
truth. Or even if you may a fictional song or what they used to call back in the day, a movie on wax.
Okay. But when you're promoting and talking about actual murders or you're talking about someone
(48:48):
who's enemy to you, whether you have something to do with killing them or not, and you're destroying
the name or or or or stuff like that. That's demonic. That's demonic right there. Like with
with Chicago drill, Tooka, when I when I first heard Chief Keef, I thought Tooka was another,
(49:10):
you know, another name for weed. And then people call weed something but chronic,
cheeba, but, you know, something that's another name for it. And then when I started figuring out
that he was saying, fuck Tooka gang, you know, that's, okay. So it's a gang. Then as the stories
come out, you see, oh, Tooka was a young man that was murdered and they sit there, you know,
(49:36):
dissing him in songs forever to this day. And then they they they would do with other people,
but he was the main one, you know, fuck Tooka. This is the third. Then when you see the interviews with
his mother who still has to see this has to hear this and then this worldwide, you got fans saying
and stuff like that and her describing the day. He died. And I'm not saying she's only mother that should be
(50:01):
you should have compassion for because all these mothers, whether that son was out there doing
the killing or not, it's still death. Their sons are being killed and killing each other. And a lot of
them when you look at it were friends. They were friends. Some of them were even family cousins.
And they're killing and fighting each other. Fighting is one thing, but killing and gunning each other down
(50:26):
and plotting on each other and she's one of many mothers that's here. Their son being
disrespected and things like that. They've gone even further with even putting pictures up of
people dead in their in the casket and they're making comments and things. This is real disgusting shit.
(50:48):
And I've seen videos and pictures people going to people's graves digging graves up
pissing on graves like are you serious? Are you serious?
This is my goodness. I have some people in this world that I utterly cannot stand. I cannot.
And don't wish them well. I don't wish any good on them at all, but I don't wish
(51:14):
death on them or their kids if they do die. I'm not going to celebrate. I'm not going to dance on
their grave. Piss on their grave. None of that. None of that. Not at all. This drill and drilling
the whole blame because it's just, it just drill, it's gangster rap like on steroids.
(51:35):
And it just was a whole other thing. And you had some of these guys who are very talented,
like the drill style is not really a problem with that is the content. What's being said.
Now you see something that Chicago guys, which they have drilled also in the UK and New York drill,
is just as bad as Chicago would stop there doing this stuff.
(52:05):
You got a lot of these guys in Chicago now. They say they are pushing peace.
I don't know how true that is. I hope they are pushing peace.
Hopefully it's not a farse to maybe get their enemies, to lower their of Security. I don't know,
(52:32):
but some of these guys say they are pushing peace. I hope that's what it is, but it's not enough.
Like a lot of it. They all need to do it. Even if they can't be friends. I understand they can't be
friends with another blood has been shed. People killing each other. And I understand that, but maybe a cease
fire where if I see you somewhere, I'm not going to shoot at you. If you're in my neighborhood,
(52:57):
I'm not going to shoot at doing anything to you, nothing like that. Something like that.
You know, a truth if you will. Something like that. Because you notice that these kids have these guns.
Some of them have guns. They can't handle. They don't train with guns.
So you don't know how to handle anything or anything like that. Or they got these
spray weapons. Where you just pray and spray?
(53:21):
Whatever. And they go after their enemies.
And you go after them, but you kill a bunch of innocent people or cripple a bunch of innocent people.
You shouldn't be doing this shit at all, but if you're going to hit somebody, at least get the people you're
going to get. Not these people's babies and elderly people and other people that you involved in this
(53:44):
bullshit. And that's not just in Chicago everywhere. St. Louis here in Buffalo. The violence is
right here in Buffalo, where I live in Buffalo, New York. It's crazy. And speaking of that,
summer's coming. And what's the first thing that we all say when summer comes? You know,
we're close with them. My barbecues, pools, things like that. The first thing we all say,
(54:08):
yeah, people are on the side of tripping and getting stupid in the summer. That's the first thing
we say, but you know why? Because that's what happens. People like being fucking stupid.
Fight. You can't fight. You got to get a gun or some of you can't take an ass weapon.
So you go back and get a gun that killed somebody or whatever or even worse in some situations.
(54:32):
You get in the fight with someone one-on-one. They go lie to their homies, charge them up.
Aw they jump me. So now they're amped up. They're coming shooting up people's houses and things.
And the women are just as bad as females, excuse me, are just bad as the guys. They're jumping people,
cutting people's faces, they're shooting people. It's all the damn mess. It's all a goddamn mess, man.
(54:56):
Just disgusting. I'm a licensed gun carry myself. And I didn't get a gun. I mean, I enjoy guns. I'm not
gonna lie. I'm a, you know, I enjoy guns, but I didn't get guns that look cool to be tough. I got guns
for protection for myself and possibly other people if need be because this stuff is crazy.
(55:20):
But the new laws that making for the guns are hurting the citizens.
Now attacking criminals, the criminals got armor-piercing rounds and
guns you've never seen before and stuff we can't even buy. Military grade stuff. And with that being said,
(55:44):
a number of military groups, active duty military, guys in Chicago, all over the country,
have been getting caught up in RICO charges and everything for selling guns to these gangs.
I think about the switch for the glock. That was made for the military. So how's it on street?
(56:08):
The creator of the switch for the glock. He was upset with all the murders that going on. He said,
he's feels responsible. He's saying that "I never should have made the switch because it was only
meant for the military", but he can't really blame himself. He makes it for the military and it gets
(56:29):
on the street. And we're not gonna play games. We know how it goes on the street.
Cointel Pro never stopped. And you have agent provocateurs that keep things going on.
In all these neighborhoods, especially in the predominantly black and brown neighborhoods,
how many stories have you heard from old school gangsters that were in gangs that mostly they
(56:52):
did, mostly they fought and stuff like that? How many stories and you can go, you can go on internet
anywhere, podcast, and listen to the interviews. They all have the same story. Oh, was this area we were
at a we were playing a blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, we find the crate of guns one day in the spot.
There was never created guns there before. They find a crate, you heard what I said? They said a crate.
(57:14):
Not just some guns in the street, a crate of guns.
That's just like when COVID hit and people were rioting for George Floyd and things like that.
And COVID, you saw the videos. These groups of guys leaving bricks out in the middle street for people
(57:36):
to grab because they're there playing on your emotions. You're angry, you're looking to,
oh look, that's a pile of bricks. Come on now.
You know, but what do I know? No, I'm crazy. You know, I'm crazy. I don't know what I'm talking about.
You know, I don't know nothing. You know, but anyway,
(57:58):
hope you guys enjoy the rest of your day. That's my time. This was the first episode of
With All Sincerity. I am Mr. sincere. Signing it off. Have a good day.