Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
I guess who's back, check me out.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Still the best, tired of Gucci written all over.
Speaker 3 (00:25):
Him, Still Bank, still doing my thanks, says I left
say too much change.
Speaker 4 (00:40):
And even when I was close to the feet.
Speaker 5 (00:42):
And my feet I think to do across the still him,
Still take you myself to.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
Charlton Curry a former NFL now President and CEO.
Speaker 5 (01:01):
Of Big C Sports Corporation.
Speaker 2 (01:03):
Mister Curry loves bringing sports and real life experiences to
his worldwide audience. Charlton is a long time award winning
top radio broadcaster and covering all sports including NFL football,
NBA basketball, MLB baseball, as well as college football, basketball, baseball,
MMA boxing, golf, soccer, and others on many networks and podcasts.
(01:27):
Charlton hosts riveting and informative discussions on race, big business
in sports.
Speaker 5 (01:33):
He is the co.
Speaker 2 (01:34):
Chair of the Sacramento chapter of the National Black Wall
Street Project, focused on restorative justice and economic empowerment. Mister
Curry is a business development consultant for Resource Development Consulting
and Corporating, the top endorsement in the state of California,
whose focus is to provide information and services to seniors,
(01:54):
agents and recruiters for RDC Best Line Business Funding provides
working capital for business owners nationwide an employment for people
around the country, while also offering hope. Contact mister Curry
today for all your business development needs and more.
Speaker 5 (02:11):
Now streaming on Limitless TV dot Net. Together we achieve greatness.
Speaker 6 (02:24):
House divided against itself cannot stand.
Speaker 5 (02:46):
We're here to celebrate where we've come from for the
last two hundred and thirty three years. Today is a
new chapter. Today is a new page, and I think
you'll agree that the new chapter of dayloff with a
good start.
Speaker 7 (03:08):
It's the right idea, right approach, on the right technology.
Speaker 8 (03:12):
Well get rewarded in any market.
Speaker 2 (03:23):
We can change the outcomes of people's lives, heaving.
Speaker 5 (03:32):
The leap of faith, the vote of confidence.
Speaker 9 (03:34):
That is why we're standing here today, getting ready to
ring the bell on the.
Speaker 5 (03:39):
New York Stock Exchange.
Speaker 2 (03:46):
Reparations has been here and have been working on for generations.
Speaker 9 (03:50):
From the very beginning, people were knocking on the door
saying we are old for our labor.
Speaker 5 (03:58):
Kelly House shoes bored.
Speaker 6 (04:00):
She went out all around in the community telling black
people that they ought asked the government to get somebody
because they were pulled and they were desperate. By the
nineteen hundred, she had three hundred thousand dues paying members.
It was the largest organization of black folk that had existed.
(04:22):
Pretty soon, her activities came to the attention of the
government and they convicted her a fraud. The federal charge
was that, at a time when you should have known
that the federal government would have never give negroes anything,
why were you telling negroes they should organize to try
to get something. They sent her to prison to serve
(04:46):
a one year term. She got out of prison, she
went back to Danshville to this shotgun house. She got
uterine cancer.
Speaker 5 (04:54):
And she died.
Speaker 6 (04:58):
You can draw a a direct line from Kelly House
to the reparations movement.
Speaker 5 (05:04):
Today. You've made Onheart.
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Speaker 4 (05:55):
Looking for a unique point of view on pro sports
game analysis. This dude in the Big v Sports podcast
on iHeartRadio. We of sports talk worldwide. Mister live episode
replay it born demand on the iHeart Radio app. Join
Big c for NFL flap and long time award winning
radio broadcaster cook in all sports including NFL, NBA, MLB, UFC,
(06:17):
n CUBA, USL and moved to their live or on
demand or Higheart Radio podcast today.
Speaker 11 (06:26):
One of the boards, bon Jo. Many minute details. Let's
get ready to run.
Speaker 5 (06:37):
Yeah, welcome to the show.
Speaker 3 (06:39):
My name Missus Trafton, Big in the Big Sports coming
to your worldwide on the Big Sea Sports Network of
the number one network in the United States. The Big
Sea Sport cat been voted the number one was due
in the black.
Speaker 5 (06:54):
Oh you gotta get that some praise in the university.
Speaker 3 (06:57):
I want to say welcome to the show. On a
BEAUTI for up day. In his quizday, I'm gonna say hey,
two thousand and in twenty five, it's how this takes
six name up. They leave it the head into the
years in twenty twenty five to the show, it's positive
by your Northern California, kind of like DLAs. How many
y'all new Candle, I guess the league the standard of
(07:19):
the world. When you go back in ten five yards,
tell him I want to take a test drive in
the black hole. You gotta get a black hole from
praise given, praise, praise, praise. Well that's past three and
I'm taking with it. I'm one beautiful and jellgend black man.
I'm gonna do the show. I direct the topics, I
do the three telling, I do the stats for providing.
I even do the play by play.
Speaker 5 (07:40):
Curry four three, Yes, get the hole. Curry, get the hole.
You gotta get the hole with Big Kig. I'm the
only sport show broadcasting live from the black hole in
the universe. You gotta get that some praise.
Speaker 3 (07:53):
He've been praise playing praise on ten years. I've never
been to show with basis courts. And now we got
people who in practice. I'm not talking about the game.
Speaker 5 (08:02):
I'm talking about practice. Now we got people who's missed practice.
Speaker 3 (08:05):
That part though, is and I'm taking fitted, dude, I
gotta tell you, I love saying thank you Dfinity, Pomcast
TV podcast like Effect TV, sosis to the universe, just
making to look at penicis one three for God said reparations,
now reparations.
Speaker 5 (08:25):
He then got said that to be like it is
got that's it, that's it.
Speaker 3 (08:29):
Gis praeze. I love giving God praise off pharanleven one.
We got so many things going on in the world of.
Speaker 5 (08:36):
The sports universe.
Speaker 3 (08:38):
ESPN they didn't lost their mind and they didn't bought,
they done, but they done by the NFL network. I'm
not tolerated having diversity and television or the NFI networks.
Speaker 5 (08:49):
Been consumed like a lion.
Speaker 3 (08:52):
A lion is eating the NFL network. I love NFL
network because they have the rent. They can show you
what's happening in the red zone and all the games played.
Speaker 5 (09:04):
That we get. ESPN didn't do that, but now they will.
Speaker 3 (09:07):
And they consume their brethren. A lot of guys that
were on n IF I never they wouldn't hire them
for ESPN. They just wouldn't do that, and there would
be lots of guys losing their jobs.
Speaker 5 (09:17):
And right before we stand up for the kick off.
Right before we stand up for the kickoff.
Speaker 3 (09:22):
They're gonna start firing guys. Doesn't make any existence. They're
not gonna keep everybody. You already know that Manas is gone.
And then they'll they'll trim down some of the broadcasters
that they have out there. That's not fair, but that's
what's happening in the world of sports.
Speaker 12 (09:35):
And not and not only that Et his Castle, they
hip Hop Award two.
Speaker 5 (09:44):
They said they didn't want.
Speaker 3 (09:45):
All that hip hop, and I can understand because sometimes
that the behavior and sometimes that the way that people
were behaving it. It's not like the old days of
b ET when Michael Jackson was doing his thing and
grabbing his crotch. The imprints came on and dither Thing.
Speaker 5 (10:00):
And Motley Cup. They were saying, post me sugar, hold
me e sports and ship the only one. I'm not
a sports on me. Yeah they did.
Speaker 3 (10:08):
It's not like they had cancer and Cancel's on that. Well,
now it's gonna bit different wind of then.
Speaker 5 (10:13):
Whatever it is. There's a lot of African Americans.
Speaker 3 (10:16):
Who were well known because they had bedt to promote
what they were doing. But now that hip hop has
become more anti African American.
Speaker 5 (10:25):
If that makes it to you, call.
Speaker 3 (10:27):
Them women out of their names, call them the N word.
In trying to act like like nobody rids his right.
And so I don't miss that part, but I do
miss the part where a lot of people have lost
the opportunity to promote themselves. But I'm telling you I'm
not I'm not saying that I'm that I'm right about everything.
But I've been saying get your own network. If you
(10:47):
start your own podcasts, then you control when you fire yourself,
if that makes sense. Even if Alack Groom goes I
got thirty two platforms in fiction sports.
Speaker 5 (10:57):
If one goes away, I still get more. There's still
more than one to carry the program. But I'm not
tolerant everybody carry the program. And that's why I say
give it a prise. When you when you up break from.
Speaker 3 (11:07):
The driver's seat, you try to uss starts to enterprise,
do it from the driver's seat.
Speaker 5 (11:12):
If that makes sense, Gem works feed straight ahead.
Speaker 3 (11:15):
When you want to work for fee, makes you the
one that you're deriving the You gotta be the one
the driver, because if you don't fly on your own
starship enterprise, somebody can always say you're firing, they can
do it. That sod frand of wards put on boss.
Now they're saying, well we didn't, we didn't prove the shore.
We just put them on pause. That's like a relationship.
Speaker 9 (11:37):
It's all pause.
Speaker 3 (11:39):
You can go on pause with a lot of his life.
If you have your own, you gotta worry about that.
You gotta realize that you've gotta.
Speaker 5 (11:45):
Be control of your own mind. Are you all your
mother and mind? You gotta be controlled of your own.
Speaker 3 (11:52):
Mind. You gotta be control of your own mind. If
not anywhere in the fire. It's a sham, so many
people being let go. But that's just the way it is.
I gotta say it on every show. I pay off
as to the veterans, writes outline. They ruin of your experience.
Help and vetterments and the love of us get helped.
If you know anybody going through issues, picking the phone
called eight hundred two seven three eight two five five.
Speaker 5 (12:14):
That's eight hundred two seven three eighty two fifty five.
Speaker 3 (12:17):
Are you get text eight three eight two five five
that's eight three eight to five five patient online? Simply
go to a vettermous patches line dot net. That's vettermous
pretchis line dot net and when you do, you want
to give us some praise because of mind is a
terrible thing to waste. And I don't want to waste
my mind.
Speaker 5 (12:34):
You don't want to waste your mind. I think it's
a clary I call and say, you gotta grow your
own garden.
Speaker 3 (12:40):
If you refuse to grow your own garden, you can't
complain when a farmer comes home and say you gotta go,
you gotta go, you gotta go.
Speaker 5 (12:49):
But what I want to say, whether that politics in mind?
Speaker 3 (12:52):
The California governor Gotta Newson at New York Governor Catholic Haarklam.
They're fighting what's going on, Greg gabat governor of Texas
to try to re district people so they can they
have more white voters. That's just the fact they're coming
after everybody that's not telling them white and you know
it's true, you gotta fight back, stand up, And they
starting to stand up California saying we're gonna fight back.
Speaker 5 (13:12):
If you do it, We're gonna do it no matter
who you're voting for.
Speaker 3 (13:18):
They got rid of them from the maxis they getting
rid of diversity, equity inclusive They even canceled the Sesame
Street programmed.
Speaker 5 (13:27):
Taller Telivision. How do you cancel that? How do you
define that? That's where a lot of young kids learn
to count the ABC's. Yeah, they they.
Speaker 3 (13:34):
Defunded that also. I guess Big Bird was offending people.
How do you cancel a big bird? He's such a
nice bird, but they canceled him. They canceled Big Bird.
I think I think the state of Mississippi they sued
TBS all about five decades ago because they were showing
diversity on those programs. They didn't want to see senspaccy
(13:54):
with diversity. How do you sue for the against diversity?
But we know it's right California's face. If you're not
telling white everybody's up for raps. I had a white
man tell me you today. He said, the problem with
this country is all the all the immigrants coming in.
I said, did you hear that from some of your
Native American friends? He said, what I said, you're saying,
(14:15):
the problem with the America is is immigration coming in?
I said, did you hear that from some of your
Native American friends? He said no, because immigration and integration
is the same thing. They all come into vitriol, I
but not telling White. It's under attack under this administration,
and that's a fact.
Speaker 5 (14:32):
I'll not tolerate being under attack.
Speaker 3 (14:34):
I'm gonna take what's called the big ce pause, also
on the big seat time out.
Speaker 5 (14:39):
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Speaker 3 (16:19):
Went back from the Big Sea Pass also known as
a Big Sea time out.
Speaker 5 (16:23):
You can follow the Big Sea Sports twenty.
Speaker 3 (16:25):
Four hours a day, seven days a week on thirty
two podcast platforms by the Black Hole of the Universe.
That's my story and I'm taken with it. I want
to say what a great day is actually called hump day.
But there's a lot of things going on in the world.
And I have my great friend, the Great August Wesley.
He's a wrestling coach from Cape Birdie. I don't know
where he's calling from. He might be on the USS.
Speaker 5 (16:46):
Starts at in the prize. August, Welcome to the show.
How you do Issert? How you doing today? Happy Hemp?
Speaker 3 (16:52):
Day, Happy Health Day, Happy Hemp Day, and my goodness,
we'll get right into it.
Speaker 5 (16:56):
I know there's a lot of things going on.
Speaker 3 (16:58):
We have be they've castled the BET Awards show and
also I believe the Soul Train Award Show. But they're
still functioning and they're just saying their CEO sayming. They
just put them on pause. Some parts I don't like
about what BET's become. It's not the days of Michael
Jackson the Prince. It's more like a lot of Shukun
and Java and gyrating and sometimes denigrating our great, beautiful
(17:22):
culture of Black Americans.
Speaker 5 (17:24):
But give me your thoughts on it. I hate to
see people losing jobs. Your thoughts, Yeah, I think it's
sad to see those kinds of award show.
Speaker 9 (17:33):
Not being on the major networks because for a long
time it was the only time that he really could
make sure that he saw people that looked like you
get elevated and receive awards for what they did. So
many times you have people that are protesting the other
award shows and not going to them because they don't
(17:54):
feel that they're fair. If they've had latinum albums or
platinum singles and then they come runner up when it
comes time to calcl votes and it wasn't making sense.
Fifty Cents has been outspoken about how he didn't get
Best New Artists of the Year and he's like, you
don't even know the guy's name that want it over me.
Eminem also has boycotted awards. He does say thank you
(18:17):
when he gets them, but he does not go anymore.
So I just really feel some kind of way to
hear that you have historically black awards ceremonies that are
not going to be showing their their skills set. I mean,
you got people, you got directors, you got people behind
the scenes that aren't going to be getting paid. You
(18:39):
got artists that aren't going that might not have on
the mainstream Gutten Awards that would have gotten Lifetime Achievement
Awards and different.
Speaker 5 (18:47):
Things like that.
Speaker 9 (18:48):
So it's really sad to see that because I've always
liked to tune in to see people that you might
not be able to see on some of those other shows.
Speaker 3 (18:55):
Yeah, I agree with Hanna but saying I think it
was Dick Clark that help with American Band Stand that
start and Beautiful intelligent Black People on television.
Speaker 5 (19:02):
The originally people but the planet are black anyway. But
we know America's a little bit different.
Speaker 3 (19:07):
I mean, we're gonna have to come to Jesus moment
when God actually shows up all this Christian country and
God we trust. But we know there's been a lot
of pushback on a race. And then I remember the
late Don Cornelians with Soul Training. That to me, was
something you could watch with your grandparents, your parents, your
brothers and sisters and grandchildren. It was not the degrading
(19:27):
culture that the hip hop environment has turned into and
even promoting the degradation of our community, and that's not
who we are. I know some people might not like
that I'm saying that, but some of this stuff you
can't watch it with the grandmother and grandchildren. That's just
my opinion, your thoughts.
Speaker 5 (19:43):
That's true. I loved at the end he said love, peace,
and Soul Train. Yep, that's right.
Speaker 9 (19:51):
Yeah, you know it is sad because you have to
really be careful what you watch with your children or
what you watch with your grandparents, because you never know
how people are going to be dressed, how they're going
to act, what they're going.
Speaker 5 (20:05):
To be allowed to say.
Speaker 9 (20:06):
There's a lot of latitude given in things that you
can say now on TV or on cable. But when
you were watching American bands, then you were watching Soul Train.
Speaker 5 (20:16):
You didn't have to worry about that.
Speaker 9 (20:17):
You know it was clean, fun, you know it was digestible,
and you know that it was mainstream. Nowadays you really
got to think twice on what you watch around certain people.
Speaker 5 (20:27):
Hub And obviously it's entertainment industry. If you don't own it.
Speaker 3 (20:32):
It's like going to your neighbor's house, maybe cook some ribs,
and you go over to your neighbor's house cause you
smell the meat in the backyard, even though you didn't
get the invite, but you smell.
Speaker 5 (20:39):
The meat and you go over there and knock on
the door and say, hey, where's the meat.
Speaker 3 (20:43):
If they bring you in and you say, hey, I
was just come buy to see you, you know you
showed up for the ribbs, right, so they say hey,
they say you want a couple of ribs?
Speaker 5 (20:50):
You say, should I take a couple of ribs? That's okay.
But when you say ken, I having played the take home,
that's when things turn violent.
Speaker 3 (20:56):
That makes sense to you don't be bringing me home
to take home. But if you don't own your own ribs.
You can't eat all the ribs and take a home.
That makes sense to your act your thoughts, that does.
Speaker 5 (21:07):
That does make sense to me. You can have what
they gave you, but you don't get extra.
Speaker 3 (21:12):
Yeah, I know some found you only see them when
they cook in the yard bird. They want to come
take home the Uncle Boobo. You getn't come, but Uncle
Bobo want to play the rib off fred level word.
But I do want to say that's just the entertainment industry.
A lot of people are cutting the cord and they're
going through streaming. So a lot of the black actors
and actresses that had a hard time getting into the
(21:34):
mainstream anyway, it just got more difficult your thoughts.
Speaker 9 (21:39):
You know what I can say is you have seen
since COVID an influx on streaming platforms of people of color.
Speaker 5 (21:46):
You've seen Netflix, You've seen HBO, you have seen Prime.
Speaker 9 (21:51):
You have seen so many steps and opportunities that got
rib rise up. Yet since then, and I and it's
unfortunate that we have to go through COVID, but it
did give birth to other aspects of how to promote,
how to project, and how to get your stuff out
there for other people to see. And also work lives.
So many people work remote. Now people have adjustice schedule
(22:13):
so they don't go into the office all the time.
Speaker 5 (22:15):
So it's really changed. I mean education as well.
Speaker 9 (22:19):
People have there's a lot of schedules that some children
in our own partial during the week. Some parents don't
miss out on all of that time because you usued
to just drop your kid off, you know, see them
to the end of.
Speaker 5 (22:29):
The year, right.
Speaker 9 (22:30):
But nowadays there's a lot more inclusion there with parents
helping to teach. A lot of parents learned about the
new math and modern teaching things after COVID.
Speaker 5 (22:40):
So I really like the fact that a birth people
being able to Adam.
Speaker 9 (22:48):
Sandler's new movie, Yes, Happy Gilmore Too, wasn't that's not
in theaters.
Speaker 5 (22:54):
You can't go to see that in imax. That is
right on your TV.
Speaker 9 (22:59):
So a lot of people that were releasing things that
are going directly to I can tell you one that
was going to Top Gun. Top Gun number two came
out during COVID and he refused for it to do that.
He said, this movie was not made for that. It
is made for the big d It's good for him
to do that, yeah, but not everybody is a gazillionaire
and had the ability to wait for their movie to
(23:20):
come out like that. Some people knew that that has
to come out with some of their contracts are tied
into international box office, National box office and receipts.
Speaker 5 (23:28):
So he did that, but not everybody, you know, even
the Great Eddie Murphy.
Speaker 3 (23:33):
I saw this morning. He had a TV show, a
movie coming out. I forgot the name of it because
I didn't know he had a movie coming out. It
wasn't promoted on the mainstream TV programs.
Speaker 5 (23:44):
It was promoted on the news. And Eddie Murphy, you
can't get much bigger than him.
Speaker 10 (23:48):
You know.
Speaker 3 (23:49):
People think about the Great Eddie Murphy, a Beverly Hills cop,
and but when you think about Shrek, that's Adie Murphy.
Every kid loved for Shrek, but that was Adie Murphy.
And then of course he had so many other shows too.
But he had a new movie coming out. You don't
even hear about it anymore because people aren't really going
and spending twenty dollars on a ticket to see the
big screen TV anymore, and you know, they don't want
(24:10):
to be in to do TV shows your thoughts on
that it is changing right in front of our eyes.
Speaker 5 (24:14):
Like I said, thoughts it absolutely it is.
Speaker 9 (24:17):
I can say the area I am in, they just
close down one of the theaters and I love to
go to the movie. I'll go in there and get
some pop corn and relax and sit my seat back
and get comfortable for a while.
Speaker 5 (24:29):
And they really that has changed. The average family isn't
going to this movie.
Speaker 3 (24:34):
Now, August, hold on, hold on, I got it bone
to pick with you. You're supposed to be like the
common people. How you gonna brag about going to the
movies and buying your pop from there? It's ten dollars,
I mean my own mag your thoughts. Listen, I go
on Tuesday and they got a package deal. You get
(24:54):
a medium.
Speaker 9 (24:55):
Popcorn and a medium for this kind of place, you know,
and my I get my cards, get.
Speaker 10 (25:05):
Off top.
Speaker 5 (25:06):
You know you made me, You did it. I bring
my own bag. It's all fit pacings, be all greasy,
my own pop grund.
Speaker 3 (25:16):
Talking to the Great August with me, and I want
to tell you to what I love about what's going on.
Big C sports would not exist if I had to
go to quote unquote mainstream white networks to say, I
would love to submit my tape, my audition tape for
a show I want to cover sports. They have a
lot of guys who never even played sports that are
all over the microphones, most of them calucas, and they
(25:36):
know that because of the good old boy brethren.
Speaker 5 (25:38):
But I'm telling you, don't this, don't don't be be
not dismade.
Speaker 3 (25:43):
A lot of Black men and women own their own
farms before integration, They own their own business before integration,
and now that integration is going away, people say, oh
my god, what are we gonna do. We're gonna do
with our grandparents and our parents did on your own farm?
Speaker 5 (25:58):
Your thoughts. Absolutely, Ownership is key. Ownership is important.
Speaker 9 (26:03):
I mean, that's the American dream, right, having your own house,
having your own car, having it paid off, having a
nest day.
Speaker 5 (26:10):
Putting your kids through college.
Speaker 10 (26:12):
Right.
Speaker 9 (26:12):
Yeah, And so that's what we've been told since we
were young. That's what the American dream. To go work
hard and have your retirement. And but now things look
a whole lot different. It's harder to own because of
the prices, it's harder to have your retirement because things
that are going on messing with the retirement of percentages
they're talking.
Speaker 5 (26:33):
I heard Whiskers that they're.
Speaker 9 (26:34):
Talking to follow France in the pushing the retirement age
up a couple of years.
Speaker 5 (26:39):
Therefore, and I know you know how what money works.
Speaker 9 (26:42):
But therefore, if you try to retire sooner, you get
penalized if you take that money away from the account.
Speaker 5 (26:48):
There's time frames that you're allowed to do that.
Speaker 9 (26:51):
And so it's going to be really tough because retirement's
supposed to be a beautiful time, a good time. You
start giving back, you start volunteering, you start spending more
time time with your grandchildren, those kinds of things. You're
now an extension of your children, helping them. So if
they push the retirement age up a year or two,
that's gonna make it a little bit more difficult. But
(27:11):
what I can say is that Americans are resilient and
we know how to work hard. You know how to
pull our bootstraps up, and we know how to get
things done. So I'm sure we'll roll with the punches.
But what you said about Eddie Murphy, that's true. I
saw that on just a glip. It's not being projected
like it used to before.
Speaker 5 (27:30):
Eddie Murphy.
Speaker 9 (27:31):
Oh, my goodness, Doctor Doolittle, raw hilirious.
Speaker 5 (27:36):
I mean he can hit after hit after hit and
you just can't think of on the main stream like that.
Speaker 3 (27:45):
Yeah, for forty years, and Eddie Murphy still looks the same. Obviously,
he's a pretty good soap. But not a slip with
Eddie Murphy.
Speaker 5 (27:54):
I mean he's looking good, you know what.
Speaker 9 (27:58):
Him and Charlie Murphy, God rest his soul, Charlie. They's
got good jeens, you know. And but yeah, it's it's
interesting to see how people are before.
Speaker 5 (28:09):
If you were a movie star, you were a movie star.
If you were TV, you are TV.
Speaker 9 (28:13):
There are so many more crossover people now than ever
that will do a TV series. Ll cool Jay, Yeah,
he'll do TV series, He'll be he'll do a movie.
Did a Grammy come back and host the show. I
mean the firstatility that people aren't boxed like they.
Speaker 5 (28:31):
Used to be.
Speaker 9 (28:31):
You you you were silver screen yeah, or you were
and you know your role. But now people have really
come out of that show and people have done more
and more and more.
Speaker 3 (28:41):
Yeah, there's an inside well that late show that our
senior Hall had, I got the name of it, but
it was like Late Night with our senior.
Speaker 5 (28:48):
Hall, that the our senio host show. Yes, and then
he's been off the air.
Speaker 3 (28:54):
I don't think there's been any black men with a
comedy show since he was pulled off the air. But
he's still going strong. He's still whatever he's doing. And
I don't know the man personally. I'm just saying, people,
if he got your own show, they can't pull you off.
Even if a platform goes away, get another platform. And
that's what I think we can learn from our assets.
They were not looking for a union. We didn't get
(29:15):
the Homesteady Act of eighteen fifty two, we didn't get
the GI Bill. When soldiers came home from World War Two.
I met with an older white man yesterday and he said,
must have been in his seventies. Look he looks seventy something.
He might have been fifty, who knows. He said, you
know what the problem with America right now is this
all this this immigration stuff.
Speaker 5 (29:33):
I said, immigration. That's a problem with the Maria.
Speaker 3 (29:35):
Oh yeah, that's a problem with America if the immigrants
come in here and taking everything. I said, do you
have any Native American friends that told you that? Because
last I.
Speaker 5 (29:43):
Checked history, the eighteen sixty six Indian Treaty.
Speaker 3 (29:46):
It was the white people that came here to the
Europeans and killed all of them and now put them
off on some type of a plantation called a reservation
where they go and gamble. So it's integration, it's immigration
and immigration the same thing. If that's such a problem,
then why didn't the Europeans leave instead of killing the Indians.
Speaker 5 (30:04):
They could have just gone back home your ducks.
Speaker 9 (30:06):
They could have went home, and they could have kept
all that behavior over there. Because being Native American, I
do have fibal idea of an there against Indian.
Speaker 5 (30:16):
I go to my tribal events. There's the Powow. Thank
you for bringing it up.
Speaker 9 (30:20):
The three hundred and fiftieth three hundred and fiftieth Annual
Powwow goes on this weekend in Charlestown, Rhode Island.
Speaker 5 (30:29):
The Narragansett Indians are gonna go off. We're going to
have our Powow annual meeting. It's going to be great.
Speaker 9 (30:35):
And to sit there and think that the students of
this state of Rhode Island, the Narragansett students, just in
the last five years got free tuition if you want
to go to college here.
Speaker 5 (30:49):
If you think about that for a second, this was
all in the land nar against. It took until just now.
Speaker 9 (30:56):
Within the last five years, and then to get free
tuition to go to school that's on their land, on
their own land, that had got somehow rob negotiated.
Speaker 5 (31:08):
I don't know what happened. I wasn't around, but what
I do know is that's arrogantic land and they just
now got that.
Speaker 9 (31:14):
So, like, I'm supporting your point as it's interesting when
I hear people talk about immigration, when I hear people
talk about our land our home, because America, the beauty
about America is no matter who you are, you can
come here, become Americ, Americanized, and then call yourself American.
(31:36):
You can't do that in Russia, you can't do that.
In Spain, you can't do that. In China, you're still
whoever you were when you got there. In America, you
become American slash Asian and American slash Europeans.
Speaker 5 (31:51):
You become part of it.
Speaker 9 (31:52):
It has to do with the American dream and the
ideals of being American, the ideals of what it stands for.
So it's just interesting when you have people come and
say some of those things. I don't think they think
their way through it. No, I don't think they think
of true history.
Speaker 5 (32:10):
How it was. America was here before those Europeans came
over exactly.
Speaker 3 (32:14):
No, hold on, are you saying there were people on
this great land before Europeans slipped European came here?
Speaker 5 (32:21):
Is that what you're saying? O those breathe Yeah, yeah,
I can tell you most people were here for sure. Yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (32:29):
It's finny when a white man looks at me and says,
you know, the problem with America is all those immigrants
coming in. I said, they said the same thing about integration.
But the only problem I have with that mentality is
immigrants were not lynching people. Immigrants did not hold Black
American slavery, and from sixteen nineteen to eighteen sixty five,
immigrants did not have one hundred years of Jim Crow.
(32:51):
After the massurpac of Proclamation, immigrants was the one that
massively incarcerated black men. So how are you gonna tell
me that immigration is a problem when integration was the
bus The buzz were wars integration before they started blaming immigration. Now,
but it's all dark skinned people. They've never had a
problem to tell white people. In fact, white crime is
(33:12):
not called white and white crime.
Speaker 5 (33:14):
It's not.
Speaker 3 (33:14):
It's it's called crime, a black crime. They call all
the black on black crime crime is crime. But they've
always labeled with.
Speaker 5 (33:20):
The words the power of the words.
Speaker 3 (33:23):
When in liberty and justin for all, we all have
a right keep usue a liberty and justine for all.
That's my opinion, and I'm gonna take with it. But
because I gotta tell you before, but before I put
them on a pause. In fact, I want to take
what's called the Big C pause, also under the Big
Sea time out. When I come back, I want to
ask you your thoughts on the mothership. I know you're
on the enterprise. That U said starts at the enterprise.
(33:45):
They've gumbled up the NFL network like the death Dog.
I think what's called the Big C pause. I'll be
back in just a moment.
Speaker 2 (33:56):
The soul of where will you find that?
Speaker 5 (34:00):
Yeah? Yeah? Or here stay here? Oh?
Speaker 10 (34:07):
What abouts here?
Speaker 9 (34:10):
Here?
Speaker 5 (34:12):
What about here? But above all, yeah, driven vessels.
Speaker 6 (34:32):
One hundred percent driving pleasure, one hundred percent electric.
Speaker 14 (34:41):
It's the Disneyland Resort seventieth celebration, and it's not a
celebration without you.
Speaker 5 (34:50):
With all the size and laughter and fun. Everyone's excited.
Everyone's excited.
Speaker 10 (35:01):
Come join us one for the lifetime celebration at the
happiest place.
Speaker 5 (35:05):
On Earth, only for a limited time. Oh, these katies
are fired, Katie, you work here. I think I period
out of magic spoke because I work a nine to five.
I can still be too long one right whatever you
take notes? No speed, sweetly, you really think you can
(35:32):
outflip me. Hmm, that's cute, yo. I can go all
through these, bro. You need all that I can guard
you and route to us well not net need more.
(35:52):
Was looking for a quarterback. I thought you're retired feeling
these Please you're right, Billy, he just do.
Speaker 9 (36:03):
Bring on my eyes every shoe for every athlete only
at Nicks Dix.
Speaker 5 (36:08):
Says the goat. There you go down.
Speaker 9 (36:13):
I think everything.
Speaker 5 (36:20):
Welcome to this year championship game fears.
Speaker 2 (36:31):
You can score four times points on restaurants around the world,
so you can raise the bar on game.
Speaker 5 (36:41):
That's the palace the back in American Express.
Speaker 3 (36:55):
All right, ware back for the big sea Paul Off.
You don't have that big seat time out. You can
fall the ex sports twenty four hours a day, seven
days a week, on thirty two podcast platform, The Love
Eye the Universe broadcasted Life from the black Hole. In fact,
speaking of the black Hole, I've heard of the USS
starship enterprises on this five year mission to explorers brave
(37:15):
new World, to reach out to new life and new
civilizations and the boldigue go. But no man is gone therefore,
and guess who would have it that he's on the
ride right now? Whether the USS starts at Fitting Brides
the Great August Wills they welcomed to the show same
oh for a level, or the USS starts at enner Brise.
(37:37):
You know, when it comes to diversity, equity inclusion. Under
the Porter's forty seven administration, that would have been no
Lieutenant of Horror. That definitely would not have been a spark,
know what I'm saying. It would have been an all
white crew.
Speaker 5 (37:52):
But they have a new star truck.
Speaker 3 (37:54):
I believe a Captain Kirk's doing something that your thoughts
about that, police your thoughts.
Speaker 5 (37:57):
You know, I get to catch up with it, and uh,
Captain James P. Kirk is young.
Speaker 9 (38:03):
He brings a lot of energy to it. They got
a sister that's playing in there. She's up front and
a lot of women in the crew. I was really
surprised by that. I thought they would just try to
match up, you know, same for saying, But they did it.
They really do it in a different direction. Their lead
doctor is also a black man, so I was glad
(38:24):
to see that they're doing that. It's it's not just
to cling on. It's not just somebody from some other
space place. If they're actually working there and they're humans.
So I really like the fact that they're doing that,
and they're not overly trying to compensate, but they're just
it makes sense.
Speaker 3 (38:41):
Yeah, it makes more sense, like God's beautiful planet makes sense.
That's so many different hues of color on this janet,
even though all I came out of the African continent.
God must have known what he was doing, got nobody
was doing. Go to the way August Wesley, head coach
KM Burdye wrestling team. But I want to ask your
thoughts to you. And I love football and I know
you love it too, love a lot of sports, well
versed in a lot of things. Your thoughts on the Mothership?
(39:05):
I mean, the death Star could probably destroy the Enterprise.
I mean just a bigger, more forestlaw Dwarth waited with
it more of a more of an enemy of the
state of That makes sense to you. But when it
comes to NFL football, why can't ESPN coexist with the
NFL network?
Speaker 5 (39:20):
Why don't they have to goubble that up your thoughts.
Speaker 9 (39:23):
I don't know why Disney has to do that, right,
because Disney owns the ESPN, and so I'm really surprised.
Speaker 5 (39:31):
How the NFL network got brought up like that. I
think there's gonna be a little bit more control and
more censorship.
Speaker 9 (39:37):
Disney products tend to be cut and paste a little
bit more than some of the more independent The NFL
network had a different cast of people. They kind of
did it stay straight and narrow. I liked who they
brought in to speak. Yeah, it was some people that
might have had some files, might have had some unsportsmanlike,
but they also understood football.
Speaker 5 (39:58):
More As esp is more cut and narrow.
Speaker 9 (40:02):
I really hope they don't change the scope because I
think with a different variety of sportscasters, broadcasters, and even reporters,
it was good to have a different field because sometimes
you wanted that different energy.
Speaker 5 (40:17):
So I really hope they don't change that.
Speaker 9 (40:19):
Same thing is going on with TNT with the basketball,
you got Chuck, you got Kenny the Jet, and you
got Shock. And there was talk about them all leaving
and walking away because their contracts might not get renewed.
But they got bought up and now they're going to
be working with ESPN. It's going to be different to see.
Speaker 5 (40:36):
How that goes. I really hope that they're still allowed
to be them, because it'll be closed in two seconds
if not so.
Speaker 9 (40:44):
I hope that ESPN and I can't say that they
don't Eastern broadcasting system right there in Connecticut.
Speaker 5 (40:52):
They seem to have a lot of vision bring us.
Speaker 9 (40:54):
Sports unlike anything else before. Chris Berman and those boys
has done a great job. I would like to think
that they have great forward thinking. That said, I hope
they don't try to make everything like ESPN. They just
consumed it as a business, but don't try to change.
If it ain't broke, don't fix it exactly. I hope
(41:15):
let it go, you know.
Speaker 3 (41:16):
Talking to the great August Wrestley head coach wrestling Cat Birdie,
I gotta say, in my opinion of mate, I met
Tom Jackson. He was there doing his thing with Berman
and Super Bowl fifty over in San Francisco. It was
that of the Embarcadero, even though the games played down
at Santa Clara. But just seeing that face, you know,
threw Scott, the lady threw a Scott. And I love
(41:39):
the different personalities that came through ESPN, But again I
don't own it.
Speaker 5 (41:45):
But what I loved about NFL Network they have that
red zone.
Speaker 3 (41:48):
I mean, if you're a busy person, you can't sit
down and watch football from from eight o'clock in the
morning when they do the pregame shows and the network's
come on until like nine today at night when the
last Yeah, you can't. You can't stay up that late
and this it's gonna get fat and lazy. People got
things going on in life. You gotta get out of
the house. And I think that's what it's helped.
Speaker 5 (42:06):
The streaming.
Speaker 3 (42:07):
No one's walking around with an ad mch TV on
their shoulder. You can walk around with a five minutes
pilot in your hand on cell phone and still watch
the same thing. I remember watching the NBA Finals one time,
it with the Warriors playing the Cleveland Cavaliers. I'm watching
the big screen TV. My son's on his phone. I said, son,
you're watching the game. He's like, yeah, they give me
stats right now.
Speaker 5 (42:25):
Dad. You don't get that on big TV, you get
that on streaming. Your thoughts, I agree with you.
Speaker 9 (42:32):
You know, people want their stuff to go, they want
fast food, they want results from fitness, and they want
their sport. They want it on the go and they
want to keep it moving. I like how we do
have so many different options NFL network. I like those
packages that come across and you could have three games
on it one time. You can pause it, you can
come back to it, or you could watch live action.
(42:54):
You can do so many different variables and options. And
Tom Jackson, who was to ver Bronco. You neglected to
say that.
Speaker 5 (43:06):
He was a great guy. Him and Chris Berman had
so much chemistry. I mean, that was one of the
first duos that I saw that just had chemistry with
each other.
Speaker 9 (43:15):
And Stuart Scott. You know, a lot of people didn't
talk about what he went through. He got death threats,
he got hate mail, so many things because they didn't
like how he was telling sports. And one of the
things that he said as cool as the other side
of the pillow. And I can tell you I love
the things that he had to say. And what he
brought to the table. And I've been to the ESPN
(43:37):
Awards in Las Vegas. I've been, Yes, I've been backstage
and have talked to people and shook hands and made
friends with some top tier people. And I can say,
ESPN what offering that awards that annual has done a
great thing.
Speaker 5 (43:52):
And continue to do good. I just again want to say,
I hope that they don't.
Speaker 9 (43:56):
Take from some of the successes that these other networks,
that of the programs have had, because if they weren't successful,
ESPN wouldn't be looking to buy. And it's business at
the end of the day, and if it wasn't a
tangible asset, they wouldn't be looking to put their fingerprints
on it.
Speaker 5 (44:13):
So I really just hope that they bring it over
to the network, but let them do their thing, because
I understand that it's Disney.
Speaker 9 (44:21):
But it's also already been out there and already been consumed. Therefore,
you know, it's digestible and I think the masses can
still go with it.
Speaker 3 (44:29):
You know, I'm talking to the great August Wesley head
wrestling coach Kate Burdie. I gotta tell you to you know,
you always like to drop a little diamonds that I
really appreciate the fact that you go, you're flying around
on the USS Starship Enterprise, you hang out with Captain
James T.
Speaker 5 (44:44):
Kirk, and then when you go to the movies, you
go buy popcorn. A lot of guys got to bring
popcorn in.
Speaker 3 (44:50):
And then you talked about buying fast food, going on
the days of August, making Maloney's sandwiches that are fried.
Speaker 5 (44:56):
You move it on up August off friends that it were.
Speaker 3 (44:59):
But I gotta say for all the people that love sports,
I look at baseball seven percent black, actually about six
percent black. As far as Black Americans playing the game,
I think that's the illusion going on. NFL is about
seventy five percent African Americans, NBA about eighty percent. And
I but when it comes to broadcast, the NFL network
was so diverse black men, white men, black women, white women.
Speaker 5 (45:24):
I think ESPN has tried that too.
Speaker 3 (45:27):
But you know, when you have one network, they're gonna
let some people go, and oftentimes beautiful and jeligent black
people are last hired the first fire. I mean, get
your podcast ready, like who the guys say, get your
popcorn ready, Get your podcast ready, Terroll Owens said, get
your popcorn ready, because only you and Terroa's gonna afford
popcorn at a movie.
Speaker 5 (45:45):
With you, August.
Speaker 3 (45:45):
A lot of people go to go go to the
convenience for first, but people have to get their podcast
ready because if you can get your own sponsors, all
you need is what you need and then to be consistent.
And that's better to be a big fish in a
small pond than a small fish in a huge pond.
Speaker 5 (46:04):
And I think it's going to force people to go
that way your thoughts. I'll just you know, I think
that can be taken different ways.
Speaker 9 (46:10):
Because if you're a small fish in a big pond,
you have the opportunity to grow.
Speaker 5 (46:16):
You have the opportunity to be competitive for food.
Speaker 9 (46:20):
And if you have your goldfish and you have it
in ten gallon, it's only going to get certain size.
If you have your gold fish in a fifty gallon,
it's going to go to dinner size.
Speaker 5 (46:31):
Well, wait the other I don't want to. I mean,
some people got the money to go fish in a
ten can. Now you're talking at fifty gallon. It's right
ahead out that opportunity.
Speaker 9 (46:44):
I really hope that they grow and I'm hoping this
is used as an opportunity for maybe some of these
other networks.
Speaker 5 (46:51):
Now that they're getting a Class A one A environment.
Speaker 9 (46:56):
Disney have the opportunity to make their sets bigger things,
to grow people, to get paid a little bit more
because the money might be a little longer.
Speaker 5 (47:04):
You know, I like to grow. I mean, you got
mister Kahn that owns the Jacksonville Jaguars. He also owns
a soccer team, right, so you got that.
Speaker 9 (47:13):
Regardless of the success or not, there's guaranteed money because
they're sharing and their profit margins are different in the
NFL than other sports, so he's still making his money.
Speaker 5 (47:23):
And I just hope that we.
Speaker 9 (47:25):
See more ownership and leadership because when you went down
those steps when you talk about baseball and football, I
know you get into ownership because we've gotten into this before.
But I really like to see some other millionaires and
billionaires that are out there, athletes and just business man
get out there and take the plunge into sports. And
that doesn't mean you got to do to day to day.
I could just make the decisions on who does the
(47:47):
day today, you know, And when you were talking about
beautiful people being let go. I wanted to touch on something.
The Emmy award started a long time ago in nineteen
forty nine, until nineteen seventy that an African American woman
won a first Emmy for her Best.
Speaker 5 (48:08):
Woman in a Supportive Role named Fisher, and she won that.
Speaker 9 (48:14):
But in nineteteen eighty one, Isabelle Samford, who we know
and love as Louise.
Speaker 5 (48:24):
Jefferson from Jeffersons. Did you know we called her Weezy?
You know what we called her?
Speaker 9 (48:30):
She was the first woman of color to win an
Emmy in a Leading Role in a Leading Role nineteen
eighty one. They started those awards in nineteen forty nine. Yes,
it wasn't until twenty fifteen that Viola Davis won it
again for her role and How to Get Away with
Murder twenty fifteen. Yes, So things are slow, but they're
(48:54):
coming and it's really hard to hold down excellence.
Speaker 5 (48:58):
And that's what I wanted to get because.
Speaker 9 (49:00):
The bar is there, and I know the field goal
keeps getting pushed back, but the.
Speaker 5 (49:05):
Bar is set.
Speaker 9 (49:06):
And I think that people of color are resilient no
matter what's throwing to their faith.
Speaker 5 (49:12):
They keep going. They get fed.
Speaker 9 (49:14):
The worst parts of the pig and they seizon it
up and make it desirable. They they have to wait
all day for a big sea birth.
Speaker 3 (49:21):
But you know, it's work the way, it's the way.
Speaker 9 (49:27):
My point is, when we were talking about people losing opportunities,
you see some people they just keep going and they
keep finding away.
Speaker 5 (49:34):
And thus the podcast industry has been so huge because
it's gifferent people opportunity to own something that you didn't
take so much to get into. He was able to own.
Speaker 9 (49:47):
Something, and now has time has went a lot of
the prices to get some of the better microphones, some
of the some of the cameras on the phones is
all you need.
Speaker 5 (49:56):
I see people all the.
Speaker 9 (49:57):
Time doing interviews and I'm talking top with their Apple
iPhone it or what their brand new android. You don't
need a computer anymore, you don't need someone in front
of you filming. You can really do things on your own.
So I really hope that people continue to tell their story.
The only thing that I ask that you have a
little bit of facts behind it, give your opinion, give.
Speaker 5 (50:19):
A spin to it, but say that it's my opinion.
You say it all the time. It's all their in
love and war.
Speaker 9 (50:25):
That's my opinion, and I'm glad you say that because
people can't honte it to way hold on you.
Speaker 5 (50:30):
I get my right from my opinion you need compacts.
Speaker 9 (50:33):
But I'm gonna keive you my personal opinion because I
get to say that. So I'm so glad that you
do it, and the way you put it out there
for people. I think you take people to school all
the time when they listen to your show, and I
hope you keep on doing your things well. I appreciate
that very much, Area, I guess. Lastly, I just got
to say this too in an in our two minute
warning coming up again. The skin skin color, we all
(50:55):
talk all it doesn't matter, it does matter. I mean
the theologis pin it twice white.
Speaker 3 (51:00):
In the Bible Revelations chapter one, verses fourteen and fifteen,
the Book of Daniel tap To seven, verse nine and
ten and six. Christ has skinned the color of brass
and here like lambswool. That means he could be deported
by Ice if he appeared today.
Speaker 5 (51:13):
And that's the fact. And I'm just being hundred percent serious.
Speaker 3 (51:16):
So when an older white man sits down and tells
me the problem with America is all this immigration, I
said did you have any Native American friends that told
you that, Because if you believe that, they would still
be a lot, they would still have this lamb.
Speaker 5 (51:28):
But you guys can killed people. Not you, but your
culture did it. And then the same thing.
Speaker 3 (51:33):
The problem with America is all this integration, Governor Wallace, segregation, now,
segregation forever. Beautiful intelligent white people have to march to
go to school and to vote and to live where
they wanted to live. They had to deal with Jim
Crow laws, redlining, pig laws, black coat segregation, lynching, rape,
(51:56):
children sold off from cradle to grave, grandparents, great real parents, mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters.
And you're gonna tell me, as a white man, the
problem with America is immigration. Immagants don't have a history
of lynching people in this country. They don't have a
history of dropping a nuclear bomb on another country that's
been by white skin color. So something that coach is
(52:16):
wicked and that's a fact, and you can't sit around
and act like it's not a fact, especially when they
want to destroy diversity, equity, inclusion and get his drunken
love on sports. That's the only thing I don't like
about sports. We turn our back to what's happening. Down
in Texas. We're going to overtime, and down in Texas,
Governor Abbott, they're trying to reach change the vote by
(52:37):
redistricting things. Jerry Mandarin, Governor Kathy Hawker, and New York
Governor Gaven Newsom California, who cares about the sports? They're saying,
if they do the same agregious behavior there, they're gonna
do it in California and New York. And I know
you're smart enough to know, August, we are about more
than just who won to gain your thoughts.
Speaker 9 (52:56):
Absolutely, the fact that so many legal things are trying
to be changed to give an added advantage to me
is preposterous. I think that it's sad for anybody to
take performance enhancing drugs. It is sad for people to
try to legally carve a way to where you can
(53:18):
guarantee certain parties' success.
Speaker 5 (53:21):
That is not what it was written to do. No,
it is not the reason that we have a democratic society.
Speaker 9 (53:29):
And for us to go into other nations, other lands
and try to overthrow governments because it's not democratic, and
then not to follow our own institutional leadership rules of regulation,
expect to change or gerrymander to our liking to run
for a third term when that is against the rule.
Speaker 2 (53:50):
That we have.
Speaker 9 (53:52):
It's sad to see that because you don't need it.
Be a good politician, run on morals and values, do
what you say you're going to do, and people will
vote for you. And if not, then you get another
opportunity down the road. You don't have to cheap to
stay in power, because then that becomes dictatorship. I mean,
just today, Democratic state lawmakers rallied in Boston to protest
(54:15):
what's going on in le That's my backyard, that's.
Speaker 5 (54:20):
Going on today.
Speaker 8 (54:21):
So when you talk about certain things like what's going
on in Texas and what's coming down the pipeline, it's
sad that we're looking at this now because when you
look at a body of Europeans that came over because
they were being mistreated in.
Speaker 9 (54:36):
England, they were being mistreated in Italy, they was being
mistreated in some of these places, and they wanted to
go and start things off new and fresh and exciting
and be able to choose the religion you want and
be able.
Speaker 14 (54:48):
To live free, and then to come over and impose
steal and mislead natives of this area, and to do
that with a smile on your face, and then later
come back and say, we don't like the fact that
all these immigrants are coming over here.
Speaker 5 (55:06):
We reread yourself, the immigrants breed. That is a sad
sad time. When that's going on is called the pot
calling the kettle blot.
Speaker 3 (55:16):
Next, you know, they want to get rid of the
Statue of Liberty because it's not telling white and those
shackles on the feet of the lady liberty. That's the
symbolism of slavery, the bonuses of slavery being broken. You
can't really see it unless you have an overhead view
of it, unless you've been up on clothes enough.
Speaker 5 (55:31):
But that's there too. And what I love about you
in the last two minutes.
Speaker 3 (55:35):
We shall overcome by speaking the truth to power and
by having people get out and vote number saying vote
Democratic Republican, vote for what you feel and whatever it is.
But don't say on your sofa and say are nothing's
gonna change. You see what happens when you don't vote.
You see what happens when women don't have a right
to have sovereignty over their bodies anymore. Because an old
(55:56):
white man said, a woman shouldn't have a choice to
choose what happens with an own b.
Speaker 5 (56:00):
That's like regious.
Speaker 3 (56:01):
They don't have to agree with what a man wants.
At the same time, what I love about this country.
I have grandparents, parents, and brothers and nephews that have
served this country as military in the Air Force and
the Army and the Marines and Navy, and I stand
up for the right to have a free country. But
(56:22):
you're not gonna have dialogue about things that we agree
and disagree with.
Speaker 5 (56:25):
But no more to say.
Speaker 3 (56:26):
If you don't kiss my butt, then you're fired. Your
thoughts in the last minute.
Speaker 5 (56:31):
I agree, you should not have to do that, especially
when you're in politics. I understand that there's a conversation and.
Speaker 9 (56:39):
There's things that happen in the back door, and there's
things that happen in the front door, but you should
not have to do that. And like you said, my
parents are military retired twenty years yeah, proudly. You know,
I was a military brat and I was gonna I
took my test to go to go into the military.
Speaker 5 (56:57):
You know, I thought about it, but that was right
around early when the Gulf War was going on, and
I just really didn't want Uncle Sam telling me what
to do. But what I can say is going into
the military.
Speaker 9 (57:08):
Was a way out for a lot a lot of
people that lived at the Jim Crow style and that
lived all throughout the United States. So the military has
been a wonderful thing and the playing field has been
leveled to a degree. But every time every few years,
another movie or documentary comes out that shows how difficult
it was for women that their job was just to
do clean up the area with the mail, or it
(57:30):
was for the Tuskegee airben, or it was for people
that was on the Navy shipyard, or it was people
they had to be cooked.
Speaker 5 (57:36):
So they only had certain jobs that they could do.
But guess what they could.
Speaker 9 (57:40):
Still fight and they their country and whatever was allowed
for them to do at a certain time. And then
later more opportunities came. So it's been some struggle. We
have that first women in general that was in the
Navy over here in the East Coast that I saw.
Speaker 5 (57:59):
Great documentary on that system. So it's it's coming.
Speaker 9 (58:03):
Along, you know, and I want to I want to
see some things happen in my lifetime. Unfortunately, my grandparents
did not get to see some things. So I can
tell you that when I pray, I like to let
them know what's going on.
Speaker 5 (58:16):
I like to let them see things through my eyes
because I am an extension of them.
Speaker 9 (58:21):
The sacrifices that they made, the stuff that they took,
the negativity that they continued to go and continue to
be with each other and continue to thrive and take
care of their family so that their kids could be
and have what they needed and have a better opportunity.
Speaker 5 (58:36):
And I am the kid of their kids. And then
now look at me. So I can only say that
things get better and better.
Speaker 9 (58:43):
And you know it's tough because hard times make strong people.
Speaker 5 (58:48):
Yeah, it does. You can't give up no matter what
it is. You got to fight for whatever you want.
Speaker 3 (58:52):
Get up and outwork people, outwork people, out work people,
and outwork people. I'm gonna have to be in thirty seconds,
anything to imagine about where you might be on that
us and starts to being wise your thoughts on this.
Speaker 5 (59:04):
Well, we're gonna be landing soon.
Speaker 9 (59:05):
I can tell you our boys and girls are training
for the World Championship coming up in Croatia. That's gonna
be in September, right, now, Matteo is training in Germany.
We was just on the phone today. He's having a
great time training with the Germans. Anthony's headed up to
Canada to train after he's coming to California, so maybe
you can meet up with them after he leaves California.
(59:27):
He's going to Canada to train for three weeks before
he goes over to Croatia. And so it's just an
exciting time. You got two people training in Portugal. So
really we're doing what we need to do be in
the world through sport. And I can't tell you what
a beautiful, beautiful thing it is to be able to
go to another country, go to another land, not understand
(59:49):
what they're saying, but being able to communicate because you
don't have to speak the same language to communicate. You
can be nice, you can be gentle, you can be peaceful,
you can say thank you, you can say please, you
can have a smile on your face and greeted and
treated fairly. But I can tell you one thing, it's
tough when you're treated better outside the country than you
are in your own country.
Speaker 5 (01:00:10):
Sometimes that's tough.
Speaker 9 (01:00:11):
But I think we're getting there, and it's due to
the immigration it's due to the different food, It's due
to the different culture. It's due to the sub the
sub community and areas of people that influence. You have
a lot to do with why America is so beautiful,
why people want to come over here, and you have
an opportunity for life, liberty and the pursuit of happening.
Speaker 5 (01:00:34):
That is so wonderful.
Speaker 3 (01:00:35):
Always said, well, the Great August Westleys Broacaster life from.
Speaker 5 (01:00:38):
The USS startsup Enterprise.
Speaker 3 (01:00:40):
I'm gonna take us call the Vixin pause and also
on as a Vixen time out.
Speaker 5 (01:00:44):
I'll be back in just a moment. August, Thank you, sir,
Thank you.
Speaker 6 (01:00:49):
Sports and.
Speaker 7 (01:00:56):
More screen to realize the Keep, the Goddess, the Swamp Princess.
It's my personal studio space, the Spitting Bar.
Speaker 5 (01:01:03):
It's a sunny day. Gang's all here, oil you know, shift,
oh my shoulders. They brag about intelligence.
Speaker 7 (01:01:12):
No way they can predict my next movie?
Speaker 5 (01:01:15):
Can your phone do that? The Noon's Galaxies and Folk seven.
Speaker 7 (01:01:21):
Cornelius HB A discovery bringing strangers together, saying those names
John and humanized up for men.
Speaker 4 (01:01:30):
Every time I say I'm the fifth generation of zinc Quarterman,
an enslaved man.
Speaker 7 (01:01:36):
Part of me dies on the journey across the years
field article number fifteen forty acres, a mule and two
hundred dollars. Abraham Lincoln has assassinated the enslaved, got nothing.
Speaker 5 (01:01:48):
Congress passes the homestead that social security that Gi built.
The faha, when we've come to Washington, we are coming
to get our check.
Speaker 13 (01:02:00):
Came my love, olly.
Speaker 7 (01:02:03):
Connected by a common cause.
Speaker 5 (01:02:05):
Harm happens locally, so pair has to happen locally. Do
the work. Look at your own history. What was your
family's role.
Speaker 7 (01:02:13):
Seeking justice and peace? The cost of inheritance A special
edition of America reframed.
Speaker 2 (01:02:21):
Which automaker employs the most hourly workers in the country?
Speaker 5 (01:02:26):
Forward, Which automaker assembles the most vehicles in the country. Forward.
Speaker 2 (01:02:32):
That's not a coincidence.
Speaker 5 (01:02:34):
It's a commitment.
Speaker 2 (01:02:35):
And now, at this unprecedented moment in automotive history, COO
benefits from Ford's commitment to America for over one hundred
and twenty years.
Speaker 5 (01:02:44):
You employee pricing, you pay what we pay. All right,
went back when the big feed love, all of those
in the big feeds have happen.
Speaker 3 (01:02:56):
You can follow the big seas boards twenty four hours
of the Day, seven days a week on thirty two
podcast platforms.
Speaker 5 (01:03:03):
Labat the black Hole, Get the whole, Big Sheep, you
gotta get the whole.
Speaker 12 (01:03:07):
Talking to the Greek August Wesley and Westley coach cam
Period on the USNS Starship Enterprise to see my new worlds,
these civilizations and the vote to do where no wrestling
coach has.
Speaker 3 (01:03:22):
Prombi's poor Getting the whole, August, get the whole, and
thank you for joining Bixie Sports.
Speaker 5 (01:03:29):
I gotta tell you it's took with Chimikas, with the keep.
Speaker 3 (01:03:31):
I have a guy to protect, preserve and trash for
wealth resource Development, caselth the Neat. It can jump in
with the law Office of Attorney Scott de Maneau, the
Missing Link by Ridge of the Cruise Long Term Care
Solutions BOS the Woods over three decades of experienced help
andine singers get their benefits. Ben A carrying you taking
care of Tomorrow and California is called medical and other
(01:03:54):
states it's called medicaid. Your family and spouse can't afford
to spin down for Nursey long. You can find the
office coming eight hundred seven seven into eight saxty four
eight hundred and seven seven two eighty six twenty four
and tell them big six centsion, I'm proud of you.
We special lives to napligate baximize long term care and benefits,
(01:04:15):
Protection of your assets without the spend down, that all
paper work and communication with all government agencies are handed, biased,
bafflem and titamus methods on going biness on this neber
fining updates.
Speaker 5 (01:04:26):
As necessary, benefits, company.
Speaker 3 (01:04:29):
Is killed, urse and facilities, rescriptive medications, medically agripinate costs,
and more.
Speaker 5 (01:04:34):
But not only that, protection of your assets, bed asset protecting.
Speaker 3 (01:04:39):
Including your home, thereby allowing you community affhty for your family,
appointing the night there of deck right by the government's
a date recovery program CO probate. You've been your assets.
You don't have a rule of the trust. At the
end of last year's table, end up in probate. They
can take up in three years and they can take
up to forty percent of your state to avoid that
with a trust.
Speaker 5 (01:04:59):
I got a all from the good attorneys ring.
Speaker 3 (01:05:01):
Ring hate was up at Big c It's gonna he said,
what you believe that seven out of ten Americans refused
to have a willing of trust. I said, Oh, you
must be out of your fucking mind. Fuck wasn't fucking
and he had a trust? He said, no, seriously, Seven
out of ten Americans they take vacations, they go on planes, trains,
and automobiles. They buy Gucci handbag, diamonds and pearls, but
(01:05:23):
they refuse to protect their state.
Speaker 5 (01:05:25):
They chose to protect their assets. They behoose they have
a trust.
Speaker 3 (01:05:29):
I said, well, that's incredible, but you know with the
one time processing f first monthly interest premium for the
rest of your life, you just gotta call eight hundred
and seven seven two eight sixty four to eight hundred
seven two eighty sixteenty four in telling Big C Center
with the RDC team, you get protection. In conjuncting with
(01:05:49):
the law office of the attorneys got even new insurance
compans are required by law. The general liability workers compensation
lawyers specialize in living trust, medicare and medical planning for
long term care, avoid approbate life insurance standards, benefits aid
and the tennis.
Speaker 5 (01:06:06):
We do pre planning to avoid the look back period.
What about the fixed attest sic C.
Speaker 3 (01:06:11):
Well, the trust potent that Well, I'm glad you asked
a trust protect from those from those get the do
law firms, those top doub law dot com attorneys. A
trust protect your bank account, your checking account, your savings account,
your money market account, certificates of deposit, life insurance with
cash values, your fixed intention duties.
Speaker 5 (01:06:30):
What about just a variable assets perceives? Well, trust present that.
Speaker 3 (01:06:34):
Well, I'm glad you asked a trust. Protect your will
estate you'll callified money. Your irais your four one k's.
Also avoid capital games. Let's say you buy a house
for one hundred thousand dollars and then one year later
that out appreciation to one million dollars. Well, that's a
nine hundred dollars dollar capital games. You avoid that with
(01:06:54):
a trust. Attention to business owners. Attention business owners, you
gotta find out your options to protect. But your insertce
of dot govern eight hundred and seven seven two A
sixty four. That's eight hundred seven seven two eighty six
twenty more and tell sixty six.
Speaker 5 (01:07:10):
They said you always doesn't not having a truck, I
haven't say. He's been doing the trust for seven years.
Why would trust the arty C team will?
Speaker 3 (01:07:18):
I'm glad to ask, because Sachs tell and story sell
we have endorsment the late James Godmanz. You know, he
advised four California governors that led to chains in California
Nursey homes. He was also the CEO of the California
Association of Health Facilities. He also served on Golden Once
Quarter Directors for twenty one years. And he endorsed the
(01:07:43):
RDC team. He said, Ray, if he showed me how
to check on these long term care at timents, I
have an adorse ship. Well, Ray showed them and he
endorsed them. Whoever, did your trust?
Speaker 5 (01:07:54):
Ask him if they were endorsed by someone who serves
four governors in your day.
Speaker 3 (01:08:00):
DC team does. But not only that, we have the
lead Robert Cousin. He was the top legal mind, the
top legal counselor of Calipers. You know, Kauli Poris is
one of the largest employers in the state of California.
California is the world's fourth plotest economy after the United States.
There's China, there's England. In California, and he endorsed the
(01:08:23):
r DC team. But not only that, we have NAACP
President Satan Sisco Branch and Miss Brown, a reverend. You know,
he had lunch with doctor Martin Luther King back in
the day they were arrested for sitting in at a
white's only restaurant in the Land of the Free and
the Home of the Brave.
Speaker 5 (01:08:41):
Because the only problem with America is all these immigrants. Immigrants,
that's the problem with America.
Speaker 3 (01:08:47):
Not the people who were lynching and raping and murdering
in the gym pro laws in the red lightning.
Speaker 5 (01:08:55):
That was not.
Speaker 3 (01:08:55):
The problem is the is the immigrants. He believed people
will say that five but he endorsed the RDAC team.
Speaker 5 (01:09:03):
You know, Jamos Brown.
Speaker 3 (01:09:05):
He gave the benediction for Vice President Kamala Harris at
the DNC Chicago, you know where he was two muths
before that.
Speaker 5 (01:09:14):
He was on Big Sea Sports. He said, Big c
you gotta protect your assets. You gotta have asset protect it.
I said, I know. He said, all right.
Speaker 3 (01:09:25):
A man that had once with doctor Partnerther King Jr.
And gave the ammend a dation as a vice president.
Kamala hair was on Big Sea Sports.
Speaker 5 (01:09:32):
You gotta give that some praise. Give him praise, praise, praise,
because a praise is a terrible de luise.
Speaker 3 (01:09:38):
But not only that, we have attorney and George Joe Esquire,
but he's the heriff the California Black Timber of Commerce,
also of calib On your Black Chamber of Commerce foundation.
Speaker 5 (01:09:47):
And he endorses the RDC team. But not only that.
We have attorneys Guy given No, he's one of.
Speaker 3 (01:09:52):
The top of the state planners in all of California,
and he endorses the RDC team.
Speaker 5 (01:09:58):
But not only that.
Speaker 3 (01:09:59):
We have Castor Leon Woods, the on Leon over twenty
five years, and he endorses the RDC team.
Speaker 5 (01:10:06):
Works with media, the.
Speaker 3 (01:10:06):
Top lobbyists at the state capitol in California, and he
endorses the RDC team. But not only that, we have
missus Cheryl Brown, now see the chair of the California
Department of Beiji. You can't get much higher of an
endorsement than that. If he endorses the RDC team, he
also did a trust with me. The group whoever did
(01:10:27):
your trust asked if they were endorsed by that state's
Department of Aging.
Speaker 5 (01:10:33):
The RDC team is. But not only that, we have
Adams de la Cruze that he's.
Speaker 3 (01:10:39):
The founder of American Veterment Benefits. They can sure our
vetements get their benefits. And he endorses the RDC team.
But not only that, we have three de la Cruise
that he's the president of Resource Development in South League,
been doing anything over thirty five years with the top
endorsements in the team in California and by.
Speaker 5 (01:10:58):
The government's handbooks. And he endorses the RDC team.
Speaker 3 (01:11:03):
But not only that the F double Oh that's he's
theF Committee for the national the Black Qualthity plot. She's
also a volunteer with the Sea Jack, a coalisten for
Just and Equitable California making sure the centers of Channels
Laby get our reparations, you know, like the Just Jack
for the centers of Holocaust and like the Japanese.
Speaker 5 (01:11:20):
Americans got their reparations for the interments. Next up the
Senates of Chapel slavery.
Speaker 3 (01:11:27):
But not only that, she's a business development something with
the RDC team in best line business funding. She also
has an own economics awareness talks so called Let's eat
you can Google an excess second until dot org a
U U ninety six point finding them and e provat
dot dead.
Speaker 5 (01:11:42):
He's also starting a new platform and he endorsed with
the RDC teams. But not only that. Rouman has it
Big Sea Sports.
Speaker 3 (01:11:50):
Charlie Curry, I'm the tol chaer of the National Black
Quality Project. I volunteer with the c Jack and coal
listen for him just and that's gonna go California. I'm
a business developments put the best line business funding and
the RDC team and Bob has I'm the only person
so the sports jobs and asset protection in the universe.
Speaker 5 (01:12:12):
I broadcast lives from the black Hole. You gotta give
it some praise.
Speaker 3 (01:12:15):
Give it praise, praise, praise because the praise it's a
temper be delease. Well that's my third and I'm to
stick it with it. I catta tell you. I know
a lot of people have lost jobs. I feel for
the people that part of the layoff.
Speaker 5 (01:12:30):
Of the BEET.
Speaker 3 (01:12:32):
Take my forwards because those people have some jobs and
they gotta pay bills too. And also feel for people
at the NFL network that are gonna be consolidated, you
know because because immigrations and America's biggest problem not racism,
their jobs.
Speaker 5 (01:12:49):
And poverty in healthcare.
Speaker 3 (01:12:52):
But if you need a job, because those came through
and they say that you're firing, they find a lot
of people.
Speaker 5 (01:12:59):
You know, black women have in the biggest group of
people being laid off. In this country.
Speaker 3 (01:13:03):
You're the four tailors and black women, you know, because
immigration is the biggest problem with America, right, That's what
the old white man took me. He was wrong, He's
wrong in God's eiys and he's running his own eyes.
But how many times did they say that people don't
check them. You can't come on Big Sea Sports and
not get checked. And you also can't listen to my
program and say I don't have any opportunity talking to
listen to the Big Sea Sports. Unlike the sports programs
(01:13:26):
on ESPN, NFL network, all of them, they don't know
offer your jobs.
Speaker 5 (01:13:30):
They do not offer your jobs.
Speaker 3 (01:13:31):
I'm offering people to go to work from the United
States in America off of these states and Canada.
Speaker 5 (01:13:37):
Unsecure working capital.
Speaker 3 (01:13:38):
Best line business funding a business loan or turner of
the company approvals on less than an hour, but the
same day funding I have needed to qualify. You need
four months bay stamens.
Speaker 5 (01:13:48):
You need to.
Speaker 3 (01:13:49):
Process five thousand dollars a minimum monthly in your business
checking account.
Speaker 5 (01:13:54):
You got to be in business at least six months,
but not only that. Best line business funding.
Speaker 3 (01:14:00):
We specialize in unsecured working capital up to five million dollars,
no collateral, no appraise on no TAXI turn.
Speaker 5 (01:14:08):
No W two. It's prevalent basic funding.
Speaker 3 (01:14:13):
We have early play off bsiness counsel and report your
opinions to you're done in brass feet.
Speaker 5 (01:14:16):
That improves your done in brassbee business credit and we
get funding one day. You gotta give that some praise.
Give it praise, praise, praise because of funding is a
temple in the ways.
Speaker 3 (01:14:28):
Ain't hundred seven center into a SA two four, that's
ain't hundred and seven centter intwo a SA T four. Well,
that's powers. Throw them taken with it. As you know,
I always go into overtime BIX sports, I pay amens. Yeah,
give me some praise.
Speaker 5 (01:14:39):
I deserve it. Give me some praise. I deserve it.
Speaker 3 (01:14:43):
I got some friends that work at the NFL network
be saying, big C, you have a great show, but
you talk too much politic.
Speaker 5 (01:14:51):
Just take the sports.
Speaker 3 (01:14:53):
And now someone that's got to call him. He said, hey,
bix you you gotta you gotta you got a job.
Bix C, you you you gotta you gotta. God big
see I say, I say, you don't talk enough politics.
Speaker 5 (01:15:05):
Open your eyes.
Speaker 3 (01:15:06):
You gotta have your eyes while over on the big sports,
because that's how I was raised. I want to pay
amen to my beautiful give give, give some priest to
open your eyes. Open your eyes on the US starts
to enterprise on a mission, to boldly go discover strange
new world, to seek out new life in new similar sations,
(01:15:26):
to folly go when no man is going. Before I
even flying to the black hole, I think the any
prophet to the black hole, that's why stray. That's where
the that's where the diamonds are. The best diamonds in
the history of the universe can be found in the
black hole.
Speaker 5 (01:15:42):
But you gotta get in. If you don't have the
right code, you're not gigged in. That's why I have
to digging with it.
Speaker 3 (01:15:48):
I want to pay amen to my beautiful family members
on my mother's side of my great grandparents, Mama and Papa.
Speaker 5 (01:15:54):
Beautiful love, being.
Speaker 3 (01:15:55):
Kind of people, always thinking, sure, lots of love with
the family, and that's of food in the belly. I
love them all my heart, my body and soul. And
then my grandparents my being heze cock.
Speaker 5 (01:16:05):
They were seers.
Speaker 3 (01:16:06):
They could off the time of look at a person
and tell you a lot about their past, the present,
in their future, and they still help me to it's dead,
and then that can always append to my Mama's the
most beautiful mama that God ever maid with his own
hands into history of the universe. Shutter the heads drive program,
a food program, and also falls an all boys and
(01:16:28):
literally baseball team for the championship.
Speaker 5 (01:16:30):
Of the Universe.
Speaker 3 (01:16:31):
Always seeing Roseter Shun, always saying to God, you said,
for all the land that thou seeings, will I give
you and not see forever my dear mama, the best
person I ever met in my life, Always saying, baby,
just praying. I love my mama, but all my heart,
my body and soul on my father's side. My grandparents
output and I burn of Curry, the Red Paptors. They
(01:16:52):
had three churches, They owned two gas stations. They also
owned forty acres of land. I remember being eight years
old walking through the hallway attended like a night in Oakland,
about ten o'clock at night.
Speaker 5 (01:17:02):
I told somebody to test me my fourier.
Speaker 3 (01:17:04):
She said, what are you doing, young man, going against
some cookies? I said, Grandma, it's ten o'clock at knife.
Speaker 5 (01:17:09):
You you want me to go to bed? At eighteen thirty.
She said, what are you doing, young man? Going against
the cookies and said cookers and baby crapped up. But
I'm doing Grandma. I'm going to get my reparations. But
a couple of cookers was learned. It's been a long week.
Speaker 3 (01:17:22):
How could a white man tell me that immigrations the
biggest problem with America?
Speaker 5 (01:17:27):
Give me where the white man's gone his shee old
deal on his droy all over the planet. Google it,
Google it.
Speaker 3 (01:17:35):
You gotta pay reparations. She said, that's something about your voice.
I love him you speak and now makes sports?
Speaker 5 (01:17:42):
Is it fanning? How? How lost the NFL network?
Speaker 3 (01:17:46):
You gotta get as a plaise you joint pain, sunshine
and rays and I'm black homey You you talk too
much politics?
Speaker 5 (01:17:52):
Big seed?
Speaker 10 (01:17:53):
Uh?
Speaker 5 (01:17:53):
Big ce uh Uh? You think you think I could
come on your should? You think I could?
Speaker 3 (01:17:57):
You think I could get a job with your big seed?
Some of these sad guys that look just like me
trying to talk rap. Oh man, you're only doing a podcast,
and now that they're out of work calling me asking
me for work. I say, start your own podcast, throw
your own garden sometime. My neighbor then got the ribs
go on their ribs milk so good, you know, I
just find a way to Hey, Joe, how.
Speaker 5 (01:18:19):
You doing, Joe good Man? What's going on? I was
just wondering what you guys are doing. You know, I
haven't seen you a couple of days. Oh, I guess
I got some company over it. I said, okay, you
might have come in. He said, oh okay. I said, man,
what's that smell?
Speaker 10 (01:18:33):
You know?
Speaker 5 (01:18:33):
I got some ribs on the grill. I said, some ribs.
I said, how ABU want some ribs? He said two fifty?
I said two fifty.
Speaker 3 (01:18:39):
Yeah, yeah, man, you been to have a couple And
by the time I ate a whole tin of reb
I say, man, you might have take some home for
my dog.
Speaker 5 (01:18:46):
He said, Man, get out of here and bring some
me next time. Something. It takes a me to come
to your dog.
Speaker 3 (01:18:52):
See, if I have my own ribs, I ain't got
to go to my neighbors trying to stiff around. Here's
barbac your grill. I got my own garden, and I
got my own bar I caught to take some risks.
Speaker 5 (01:19:01):
I'm to my dog.
Speaker 3 (01:19:02):
He thought that was rude. I don't think it's rude.
But you gotta have your own guarden. That's why my
story I'm taking with it. And that's what my grandparents,
my parents talk me. And then my beautiful grandparents left
them with all my body and sold my beautiful father.
Speaker 5 (01:19:15):
Former United States Air Force fighting plots.
Speaker 3 (01:19:17):
You but getnick always making sure that place can fly
high so you get all stay safe and night.
Speaker 5 (01:19:22):
Always send develop your mind to the highest extent. You know.
Speaker 3 (01:19:25):
My dad's the first one that told me about the
head start seventy one blackbird. He said they can fly
from Los Angeles to Washington, DC in one hour, in
four minutes. He said that play is fast, like like
I'm lightning that playment so fast. Now he's retiring in
museums all over this country. Love my dad with all
my body, and sold my beautiful brother in time with
(01:19:46):
that bombastic voice, always talking at sports and politics.
Speaker 5 (01:19:49):
Time sports was like thunder.
Speaker 3 (01:19:51):
And lightning tide points was so deep, always saying go
forward it don't look back. And I love you with
all my my body, and sold my beautiful Daisy, the
most beautiful daughter that God ever made with his.
Speaker 5 (01:20:03):
Own hands in the history of the universe.
Speaker 3 (01:20:07):
College graduate two degrees with not us and three to
half fears from a Maine University swimmer Can Lotte days.
You could be anything you wanna be. Always trust God,
always praise God the blood of Jesus. I pray that
no weapon forming against web potback. That's my I'm taking
with it, you know, Daisy said at the very first
interview listen, I brought Ton Dewn. Daisy set us the
very first interview for Fixie Sports back in the days.
Speaker 5 (01:20:29):
That say the media.
Speaker 3 (01:20:30):
It became the first time in the history of the
United States of America that NFL mone than that football
started broadcasting live on the Wall Street Business Network. They
had never done it before. In fact, I had a
guess from the NFL network and I'm still standing. And
now they're asking me for a job. I said, you
gotta start your own podcast. You gotta go your own guard.
(01:20:53):
My neighbor wouldn't let me have some more real for
give it up to my dog. If I have my
own barbecue drill.
Speaker 5 (01:20:58):
I can give do gall he wants.
Speaker 3 (01:21:00):
But I learned the lesson of heart when he says,
you gotta you can't be taking food on with your
dog man. That's that's not cool. I say, hey, I understand.
But he taught me a lesson. Go get your own
ribs and get the dog the rib off your grill,
not your neighbor's grill. That's my stor digging with it.
And then Daisy is a great athlete. You know she
set up as a great athlete in high school. SC
(01:21:21):
six goes on a soccer game. It with Daisy with
the dribble, Daisy with the kids, Daisy with the goal,
Go go go. Has the team won the game?
Speaker 5 (01:21:35):
You can always win a life. Always trust God, Always
chat on God. That's my story. I'm taking with it.
I love it with all my body.
Speaker 3 (01:21:42):
And so my beautiful have some sudden Malcolm the most
had some son that God ever made with his own
hands into history for the universe. Collins Graduate, very smart area,
that a good man, macam Always trust God, always chat
on God. The blood Jesus, I pray that went up
from the gains that prospo con help me save trees.
(01:22:03):
I just always getting newspapers and look them stats on
players and teams for a big seas ports and one
day might said, Dad, why we just google it?
Speaker 5 (01:22:12):
And a lot but went up.
Speaker 3 (01:22:13):
I've been googling ever since and now I'm all over
the world and one day headed up the high school,
come said Dad. I said, yes, Tom, He said, you
want to see Big seas Ports on TV. I said, sure,
listen up, people, he said, took up the remote. Even
at the TV, it's saved playing Big C Sports. You
see a show come up that's before were living on
the air. About two months later you can find this
(01:22:37):
three Minuxpenity, Compass TV, Apple TV, Rotal TV, and Amazon
on Fire TV. Now at the Zone TV, TD three
TV coming soon, the Limit this TV.
Speaker 5 (01:22:45):
Why come be spoken up to the existence. Always trust God,
always chat on God. That's by three.
Speaker 10 (01:22:53):
Here.
Speaker 5 (01:22:53):
I'm taking it there.
Speaker 3 (01:22:54):
And then Big Ced with all that world of doledge
over the years, like my great grandparents coming out of.
Speaker 5 (01:22:59):
That burn their church.
Speaker 3 (01:23:00):
Buddy's always saying, you gotta believe, you gotta believe, you
gotta believe.
Speaker 5 (01:23:06):
They're left getting ready to rumble. Yeah, yeah, welcome to
the show.
Speaker 3 (01:23:12):
If we nominated Big Sea Supports podcast, you see, I
have those scripts.
Speaker 5 (01:23:17):
I have those three rench other prompter. I have no
producer of it.
Speaker 11 (01:23:20):
When I was talking to August, hey, if we don't
have no script, I have.
Speaker 3 (01:23:23):
This gland in the brain called the semeal gland. The
ancient callers a third eye. They say, that's how you're
taught to God. That's why I skinned too aloud. I
want God to hear, my priest.
Speaker 11 (01:23:34):
God, you said, for all the land that thou sis
will I give you, and last seas forever.
Speaker 3 (01:23:40):
Ba See Sports podcast is in your hands. In that
broadcast from the black hole, you gotta get that the breeze.
And if a network is gone, big sea sports are
still gone.
Speaker 11 (01:23:52):
One small step for man, one giant leap for a
big sea sports.
Speaker 5 (01:23:59):
Give it the praise.
Speaker 3 (01:24:00):
You gotta give it praise. Well, that fos threat, I'm
thinking with it. You know I always pay Almas is
the best fighter they ever want the planet. Back in
the day, there's a man known by the name of
Drubil Dane Brown. He's known as Muhammad Ali's right hand man.
He would always tell Ali. He said, you flow like
a butterfly and you speing like a bee. Rumble, young man, rumbo,
he said, with all you got.
Speaker 5 (01:24:22):
To use, how can you lose?
Speaker 3 (01:24:23):
Ali said, I'm so pretty I can't possibi beat. And
every time I listen to the Big Seas, I want
to shout reparations now, the just ACKs reparations forever. And
then I thought, like a butterfly, last team that could
beat you know, there was no fight agree to than
Muhammad Ali.
Speaker 5 (01:24:39):
Well that's my story. I'm thinking with it. I always pay.
Speaker 3 (01:24:42):
Almost to the inimita of a lock about the news
because he junior and America's sixteen President Abram Nickot doctor
King said the ark or the more universe is long,
but it been towards justice. Give to the biggest problem
with America. I think immigrants. I could have man say that,
do you not know your own history? Do you not
(01:25:04):
know your own history? And President Abraham thinking the only
president desaill have the bast reparations in God's times. If
they said, the Congress, you want to pass that big
beautiful bill, you gotta pass reparations.
Speaker 5 (01:25:17):
Now, the Just Act reparations ever.
Speaker 3 (01:25:20):
Say it again, they say you gotta pass reparations now,
the just as PA's reparations whatever.
Speaker 5 (01:25:26):
Say it again, they say, you gotta.
Speaker 3 (01:25:28):
Pass reparations now, the Just Act past reparations whatever. I
thank you, I appreciate you, and I hope that you
have a super fan tactic dead praise God.
Speaker 4 (01:25:55):
Looking for a unique point of view on pro sports
game analysis.
Speaker 5 (01:25:58):
You that Your Pig?
Speaker 4 (01:26:00):
These sports podcast on iHeartRadio get Real Sports Talk worldwide.
Miss a live episode, replay it on demand on the
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(01:26:22):
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