Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
So listen, y'all. We just went through some bullshit on
the show.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
Y'all. Not gonna get a full show on the visual
side over here on YouTube. But we've been potting for
like an hour now. But the fucking yeah, I'm a dickhead.
The interface memory card was full, and I took a
look at it because as you guys know, I talk
about it. I do all the audio and visual engineering
(00:24):
here and I look down and it shit said zero,
because I want to know, like, how long have we
been potting? We was going for like forty five minutes
and it's fire. So the audio is gonna be a
little off. Well, it's gonna be camera audio, so it's
gonna be echoing, but still audio. Nevertheless, so this fresh
audio is gonna be for the listeners on the just
the listeners, but the viewers will get two separate audios.
(00:46):
And this is where you're picking up from the viewers.
I forgot we took them out. We was cooking. But
let's get back to the viewership. So welcome back to
the episode two one of the nineteen and the Audio
Stop podcast. I'm your host. Will Mills aka King Dirt
raised out she's sick. She's not feeling well. We did
all this already. She'll be back next week. And also,
(01:06):
you guys know, uh four oh seven, Kevin's in the house. Yeah,
pool being waded. We agree, not you more is he
and niggas well? The fucking uh I'm doing just fun uh.
Speaker 1 (01:20):
Man waiting to the water runs dry is in the building,
you know what I mean. That's another good one.
Speaker 2 (01:26):
They got four seasons of low, four season of lowliness
with the all white one. That's a fire videos son,
you're also funny about that four season of loathing and
ship they were together.
Speaker 3 (01:38):
Yo, you know what we've been talking about that Yo.
Lark Vorhees is in every video.
Speaker 2 (01:43):
Dog.
Speaker 1 (01:43):
She was in.
Speaker 2 (01:47):
Uh with Boys to Men, She was in the Death
Gems How to Be a Player.
Speaker 1 (01:50):
She was his girl.
Speaker 3 (01:51):
She was uh Shorty and Drew Hill. You remember the
one where they had the man in the iron mask
and Cisco. That's Lark Vorhees. It's his girl, you know Locke.
I mean if it wasn't because Locke.
Speaker 2 (02:04):
Was the Locke was the battie in the ninety she
was well, nigga, she looked rough.
Speaker 1 (02:08):
Well.
Speaker 2 (02:09):
I think she's sick. Yeah, I think she's sick.
Speaker 3 (02:13):
They brought her back for the Saved by the Bell
reunion and they got her look good.
Speaker 2 (02:16):
She looked good again because it was hurt for me
in the nineties because it was always like it was
weird where black people was doing something white people were doing.
They wanted them dark skin but still ethnic looking, like
like yeah, because you had Lark, you had Ashley from
Saved by the Bell and then Save by the Bell
from Fresh First, and then you had no Stacy Dash. Yeah,
(02:42):
you see what I'm saying. They was like dark skin,
but they still had like the the real curly hair
like look Indian kind of like mixed. It was a dark,
dark skinned mixed chicks was like the top of the food.
But but I wish we can go back to a
time when we get darkened by women again, because the
list never ends. Like, I mean, you had Nia Long,
(03:05):
you had young Meghan Good, you had Garby, you had
not Late, and you had Jada. You consider in Si
lath And a dark skinned girl.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
She's darker, she's not high yellow like fucking Lisa Ray.
Speaker 2 (03:19):
Yeah. I mean, but Nia Long, I'll put her in
a light skin category. They're not light skin, They're like
brown skin. They're not dark skin, They're definitely not. There
weren't many dark skinned beauties that were on display back then.
I mean there was some dark skin be like, I
here's a dark one, but still had that Indian mixed
look to her. Uh I hold on, can I guess
what you're about to say? Fancy from the Jamie Fox Show? No, No,
(03:44):
not her, but she's a baddie. Yeah, she wound up
getting caught up on drugs. Know the girl I'm talking
about Nia the funk was her name, man oh Ship.
She was on in the House with l J Kevil Baddy.
But she was like, she looks kind of like that
she had like that Chili from TLC looked to me. Oh,
(04:06):
Chili is another one. Chili, but very very Indian looking
like like Yack but with the Indian feat. So they
wanted them a little darker. But but now it's like
high yellow almost white passing is like what they want now.
Speaker 3 (04:18):
Yeah, we don't really have like black girls in me.
I feel like most of the black girls that we
champion are like light skinned black girls.
Speaker 1 (04:24):
What I will say then?
Speaker 2 (04:26):
I can I say something?
Speaker 1 (04:30):
Yeah, she looks like a little girl to me, Like
she doesn't do it for me.
Speaker 2 (04:33):
I mean you're also like fifty.
Speaker 1 (04:35):
I'm not fifty. Zendare is what twenty six?
Speaker 2 (04:39):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (04:39):
Yeah, nigga, that's some My age rang as a fuck.
Speaker 2 (04:42):
I don't know from early forties. Oh you No, I
don't know forty three. That's like a twenty year age difference.
That's that's not a little no alright butt no, no, nigga,
I'm not sixty, nigga. Like all right, put like this,
I say for me where it doesn't look creepy. It's
(05:03):
like twenty seven in up, Okay, I think she's around
that age. She's just a Disney Channel kid. She grew
up on Disney Channel, so it would be weird.
Speaker 1 (05:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (05:10):
No, No, I don't see her like she looks like
my daughter like I would like she likes somebody I
would raise, yeah, but not because it's her body.
Speaker 3 (05:17):
She's fucking got a boy body. I mean she plays
Uh Mary Jane and Spider Man. She's a teenager. I
don't like how they try to make her like she's
not sexy. Bro yea, my man's loves her. I mean,
depending on what you see her in. No, let's not
sex appeal. She's beautiful.
Speaker 2 (05:33):
Did you watch the tennis movie where she was getting
ran through.
Speaker 1 (05:36):
I heard it. I wanted to.
Speaker 2 (05:39):
Partners or yeah, the niggas got rad that.
Speaker 1 (05:46):
Like, there are some younger girls.
Speaker 3 (05:48):
That you look at me like God, I don't even
know any of the celebrity batties anymore.
Speaker 2 (05:52):
I don't know who anybody is because they ain't on
movies no more. They on Instagram. Yeah, I don't like like.
Speaker 1 (05:57):
Like, here's one nigga Indian love Jesus Christ.
Speaker 2 (06:02):
I gotta look her up. I don't know nigga pull
it right in India love Nigga even even her sisters. No,
I don't know India love like that nigga India love
is he was against the Four Rivers earlier. Oh well
last week I did, okay, I love four Rivers. Yeah Indian, Yeah,
Indian love nigga, hold on India love. You know what
(06:26):
I like? I like Janelle Monne. I love Gene.
Speaker 1 (06:29):
I don't like how she plays with being gayto she
gaya not niggas she.
Speaker 3 (06:33):
Could be by damn. I love that she got she
had like a whole great great hitsies. Oh yeah, I
love this girl girls the other very.
Speaker 2 (06:43):
Strong like face Indian nigga. But you know what, there's
five of them, right, she has. It's five of them.
Is it Lotto ice spikers? No, no, no, she has,
it's five sisters they all look, she lives Lotto, she's
my but.
Speaker 1 (06:57):
The sister is my favorite. Look look at sister.
Speaker 2 (07:00):
Crystal love Crystal Westbrook. So just the Westbrook sisters. They
actually had a show briefly on BT. Are they related
to Russell? No, okay, Crystal Westbrook.
Speaker 1 (07:11):
Maybe they're from La.
Speaker 2 (07:13):
He's from La.
Speaker 1 (07:15):
Christal Westbrook and they all got real big, real titties.
Speaker 2 (07:19):
I love that. That's his sister right there. Oh I've
seen her on ship. Yeah, that's her sister. And then
it's Morgan and Bree and they all got real big titties.
How do you know about these people? Like? How do
you find out about people? I just four? Did it?
Is that all? One? Look at that born in nineteen
ninety four, Bro, she's thirty.
Speaker 1 (07:38):
See see what I'm saying? Yeah, that creepy.
Speaker 2 (07:41):
I don't know. I was born thirty years old, Bro,
I was born in ninety two. That's perfect for me.
But yeah, look at want I'm gonna show you all,
and it's even a fat one. Oh word, Oh give
me that one. That's the right there. See that's the sisters.
They're all bad, bro. What's the fat one's name? This one?
Speaker 1 (07:57):
Man, look look at it, but look look at her.
She's fucking gorgeous.
Speaker 2 (08:00):
Bro. Yeah, they're all gorgeous. Here go, here you go,
let's pull them up, except whatever the fuck this is.
Look at them. But this one, my hair, this one,
my hair is the badass. Yeah, badass. Yeah she's wearing
some veg. Oh no, no, that's not why she's the
bad I'm sure something she's Literally she's probably the dopest one.
(08:23):
Let me show you why. I'm sure you saying about that.
Girl's Morgan Westbrook. She's fucking ill son, surestening about her. Bro,
she's a fucking baddie, my nigga. Look at the ships,
(08:43):
money up problems. Yeah, she's a fucking badass for real.
So that ship is sexy to me? Bro, I hate
seeing I reckon that. What look at her?
Speaker 1 (09:00):
Son?
Speaker 2 (09:01):
Yeah, I don't like that's.
Speaker 1 (09:02):
Sexiest fuck well, like a figure.
Speaker 2 (09:04):
She'd be standing up with the motorcycles and all that.
Speaker 1 (09:08):
That's a dope, bad ship, my nigger.
Speaker 2 (09:14):
If you fall off that ship. And now your skin
is rissed off. Now now you're not cuing what a pussy? Yeah,
I don't like that ship at all. Don't do no
around me. Let's get back into the show because we
already recorded for but it's gonna be easy editing for me.
Speaker 1 (09:28):
And we're behind, so you know.
Speaker 2 (09:29):
I mean, if you're a listener, you you're you've been
getting old episodes, but YouTube, we're behind on that. And
that's my bad woman's call him. What what these people
be talking about? Okay, yo, were all over the place.
I watch it.
Speaker 1 (09:45):
Here's what I want to ask you, bro. Do you
watch any podcasts?
Speaker 2 (09:49):
Yeah? I watched the Joe Butden podcast. Okay, if you
ever wanted to find out how uninteresting women are, look
to podcasts. M hmm. I don't think there's a I'm
pretty sure there is. Let me let me, let me
let me put a some context on it. I don't
think there's a popular woman's podcast in existence where they're
(10:12):
not talking about sex or men. Yeah, what would they
talk about? You see?
Speaker 1 (10:19):
Women need men to in order to be interesting.
Speaker 2 (10:22):
What about like murder podcasts where they talk about.
Speaker 1 (10:24):
Like that's why I said, That's why I said popular.
Speaker 2 (10:27):
Ah.
Speaker 1 (10:27):
But that's niche. So there's fans on that one.
Speaker 2 (10:31):
But I mean popular should you see popping up on
social media and the women who are having some notoriety?
Could that be a trend of society though, Like, society
is not gonna make a podcast popular unless it's about
what they want to hear.
Speaker 1 (10:44):
That's not true because Joe Rogan is Joe Budden is.
Speaker 2 (10:47):
Mm hmm, Charlamagne in them is drink Champs is. Yeah.
But also I think and none of those talk about
fucking relationships. Do you believe in the patriarchy? No?
Speaker 1 (10:56):
I just think women, all right, watch this, I'm gonna
give you something. Right.
Speaker 2 (11:00):
So women think that men don't watch basketball because it's
women playing. We don't watch women's basketball because they suck.
Men looks better. And then they say all you saying agains,
you's a woman. I'm like, okay, well, let's take it
to another sport. I don't watch men's gymnastics. I watch
women's gymnastics because women's gymnastics are better than men gymnasis.
(11:21):
I have no interest in watching the fucking Pomelas. I
just want to watch the best of the best. But
I watched them, and that's what it's all about women.
Want to make it gender things, but it's not gender.
Y'all suck. Now. If they lowered the basketball ram up
to about eight feet and women with women in and
dunking like Lebron and them, nigga, I'm watching that.
Speaker 3 (11:40):
It wasn't there like an outburst of people watching WNBA
and college women's basketball because of like Caitlin Clark and shit,
and why because they was out here like shooting.
Speaker 1 (11:51):
No, Why because she's good, she's really good, she's good.
Speaker 2 (11:55):
Why did we start washing tennis because of Venus? And right?
Speaker 1 (12:00):
If you're good, we will nigga fuck nigga.
Speaker 2 (12:03):
They made a nation of people interested in a sport
that we never watched. We watched golf because of Tiger Woods.
So it's not it got nothing to do with gender.
Be good at it and we'll support you. Are you
kind of cutting women's feet from under them by saying
that they can't talk about men or sex though, because
like horrible decisions, right or like the other women. What
(12:23):
I'm saying is that's all they talk about. It's all
they talk about. It's not interested if that would.
Speaker 3 (12:31):
You be interested if it was about anything else, Like
if women were just talking about the ship that they like.
I don't think that it would catch a man's at
touching because we'd be like, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (12:40):
But they've never tried it, all right, So right, look,
Joe Budden runs a podcast and they mainly talk about music.
You mean to tell me there's no women who's like
good knowledge you want music? They haven't tried it. They're
just shooting for of the fucking low hanging fruit, you
know what I mean. They're not even trying to be interesting.
(13:00):
They're just following the trends. What are the top podcasts
in the world. I don't even know. Joe Rogan is
the number one podcast in the world, and his ship
is jos Carlson. I think just recently beat him out
as the number one. Like book like us, but Joe,
But Joe Rogan is the is, the is the quintessential podcast.
Is what who I view is our possible competition and
(13:21):
in their future it's the most random. It's just random. Yeah,
it's interesting. He's talking about science and he's talking about
the mother. What he's not talking about is fucking sex. Right,
He talked about religion UFOs, he got rappers on it.
Sometimes comedians on this. It's just all over the place.
But it's just how we're talking about. It's just fucking interesting, bro,
(13:43):
It's interesting. It's always interesting. Yeah. And what I'm saying
to women is if you want men or society to
pay attention to what you're doing, be interesting. And I'm
saying you can't be interesting without men. Prove me wrong.
I feel like that's a paradox, like you want them
to be interesting, but you won't let them be in No,
they're not even doing I know what I'm saying. That's
(14:04):
why I ask the question. If it exists, I'll be
glad to apologize, bro. Right.
Speaker 3 (14:10):
I think a lot of that has to do with
the patriarchy, Like what like we won't let women have
another conversation, just like the same reason why all the
female rappers all talk about their pussy's and like fucking
it's because like.
Speaker 2 (14:21):
We only want one thing. Like a rap city is
out here rapping about other shit, but she doesn't have
no type of global radio play because people don't flock
to that. People don't celebrate that, they don't chimpion that
that's not true. Okay, nothing gets men's legs, nothing gets
men moving more than appealing to our our primal instincts,
(14:43):
which is sex. Right. That's why only fans exist. This
is why women get bbls. It has nothing to do
with men. They think we like that shit. No, we
like to we like to fuck right, But nobody's marrying
these BBL bitches like nobody's You don't. Niggas ain't. You'll
see them fun looking him they listen. I remember there
was a time where it was a shameful thing to
(15:05):
be a stripper. If you ever seen Players Club, she
was ashamed of it. She wasn't proud of being a stripper. Bro.
She was she was in college and she was ashamed
of what she did. When she saw her teacher, she ran,
if they wrote that movie this ship, bro, She's happy
to do it. They did. It was called Hustlers, and
they were real proud about it, and Lizzo was in it.
(15:28):
Lizzo was a fat stripper. She was the comic relief. No,
she was a character. Look out the teddies out Jennifer.
Jennifer Lopez was like the fucking madam and it and
it sucked, by the way. It was trash because it
was all about stealing money from niggas. It was like,
it's like, it's like, what can I put like this?
(15:50):
Look at the look at the irony here and and
uh the ship women do. Right. So you want to
be loved, you want to be courted, but you're doing
things to make yourself less desirable and less likely to
be married.
Speaker 1 (16:07):
That and more independent to not need a man.
Speaker 2 (16:11):
So you're creating a fail safe for yourself to where
you don't need man by exposing yourself to get the money.
Speaker 1 (16:20):
And then after all that said and done, marry me.
Speaker 2 (16:22):
No.
Speaker 3 (16:23):
Yeah, it's poor foresight because you're gonna get your your
looks are gonna fade with time, and eventually you're gonna
want to have somebody to be there for you.
Speaker 2 (16:33):
And then you don't have that anymore because niggas are
just looking at you like you've been ran through it, right,
And I think the late Great I think Kevin Simmy's
probably said this. I heard somebody say it years ago
and I loved it. Said and I hate to throw
my own women under the bus said white women go
to college to find a husband.
Speaker 1 (16:50):
Black women go to college so they won't need one.
Speaker 2 (16:53):
Mm yeah, I think that was Kevin bro I mean,
it's not even and then somebody will take this bit
and say, oh, you're being you know, you're going against
your own.
Speaker 1 (17:04):
We don't. We don't base things on these things on
a motion bro like, I'm not. It's logic.
Speaker 2 (17:10):
I'm not. There's no I'm not dissing black women. I mean,
if you want me to think different, do something different.
Like you said, there's the patriarchy with this podcast and
shit and things of the days, right, it's not because.
Speaker 1 (17:23):
I bought this studio like horrible decisions.
Speaker 2 (17:27):
Shout to Mandy and you know, and I'm doing anything
over there and we Zy many Weezy doing anything in
horrible Decisions.
Speaker 1 (17:33):
Wezy owns. They own that podcast studio. They're flourishing.
Speaker 2 (17:37):
Granted the content is sex based and men based, but
they that's what they do. They set the ground of
what the female podcast looks like. You got lipstick, but
the lipstick shit with Angela Yee, But it's all ship
talk about fucking and sex and it's what it's all about.
What I'm saying is can women be interesting without doing that?
Speaker 1 (17:56):
I don't think so. And if I if you don't want.
Speaker 2 (17:58):
To prove me wrong, wrong, I feel like I have
a counter argument to this. But I don't have enough
research to say if it's true or not, but I
feel what happened if that does take place if a
woman makes a podcast outside of sex or men, is
that other women are are going to be the target
(18:19):
audience and it doesn't have enough staying power if just
women are watching it. You need to also appeal to men,
and men don't give a fuck about what women are doing,
Like we don't care about your hobbies and shit, like
your hobbies. If it's like and we want to do
our own hobbies and shit. It's not even like we're
trying to shit on you.
Speaker 3 (18:37):
It's just like, yo, all right, what we really want
in an ideal world is you go do your own
hobbies and I'll go do my own.
Speaker 2 (18:43):
I think that's gaslighting. Is that gas I think your
gas lighting. I do because because the thing about it
is educating, because I don't want to be a gas lighter. No, no,
no no no. I think that's sorry, not you. I
think that's a woman's way of gaslighting by just already
writing us office. Oh you're not going to be interested anyway.
It's like you, I haven't even attempted it, like like spark,
like fens like I said, Joe, butten and them have
(19:04):
a music podcast if there's a group of women to
do exactly what men are already.
Speaker 1 (19:09):
Doing right cause they say they can. So it proved
me wrong.
Speaker 2 (19:13):
I'm saying, your podcast would fucking suck if you wasn't
talking about pussy and fucking all the time. So would
you it would suck. Would you consider a woman credible
if she was out here like just uh talking about
giving her inside excuse me, giving her insight about like
hip hop and shit. Bro, she's knowledgeable, she's knowledgeable. Fuck that,
like if she knows she's talking about. There's female personalities
(19:35):
on some of these male led podcasts like on ESPN.
Speaker 1 (19:39):
BRO listen to May I listened to her, Bro, she
know the fuck she's talking about.
Speaker 2 (19:42):
When Angela was on the Breakfast Club Angela you know,
but but also her also her Angie, Uh, she had
like the rumor report. Yeah that's something that people look
forward to. Yeah, and that was her ship. Like, but
if it's a female led, That's what I'm saying. A
f like, I think this all this these thing where
(20:02):
men are not interested and it's like we don't watch
the women's not granted the most of the gymnasts.
Speaker 1 (20:10):
N and out fuck each and every one of them.
But they're not that.
Speaker 2 (20:14):
They're not like, oh my gosh, you got a fat ass,
and you know what they're doing is incredible. Like the men,
like the male gymnasts are more agile than the female
gymnast because they're men. But we don't have any interests
in the The men mostly suck. Bro I've can you
name a male gymnast in existence over the course of history?
Speaker 1 (20:34):
Can you name one?
Speaker 2 (20:35):
That's not a fair argument for me because I can't
name a female gymnast.
Speaker 1 (20:38):
Yes you can.
Speaker 2 (20:38):
You can name Gabby Douglas Simon Biles, even if you
don't watch it. You heard their name before I've heard.
I thought she was a track star. Oh no, I
thought about Gabby Douglas these it lives on Fight should
the Girl on Fire? Oh? I thought that was Alisa Keys,
that's her song, but it was about Gabby Douglas.
Speaker 1 (20:54):
Like, these girls are amazing.
Speaker 2 (20:56):
Brom Biles broke the record for being the fastest bitch
of Aalton. Who is that? That was another girl recently?
Speaker 1 (21:03):
Yeah, that's Shakari Chicago.
Speaker 2 (21:05):
She's Jamaican or some ship.
Speaker 1 (21:06):
She's American.
Speaker 2 (21:07):
These black girls are really doing it. These black and
I'm saying, like black girls, black women have the power
because they are incredible beings and they have the power.
It's like, yo, out of sight, out of mind, No
spark my fucking interest in something. It gets oversaturated, and
then when they get on podcasts with men, they get dominated.
Speaker 3 (21:27):
Like, yeah, I hate hearing Melissa Ford on the Joe
but podcast.
Speaker 2 (21:31):
I hate her. She doesn't add any value to me.
She doesn't add any value to the show.
Speaker 1 (21:35):
She has ad to me. Yeah, I think Joe did
a favor.
Speaker 3 (21:38):
Yeah, And like she's up there, worst case scenario, she's
just asking questions because she doesn't want to have any
hot takes. She doesn't want to stand behind anything salacious, right,
And then whenever she does say something that's like a
strong point.
Speaker 2 (21:50):
Niggas just back her down, right, back her down every time,
And sometimes she get herself a hot water Yeah. Oh yeah,
Cam was pissed.
Speaker 3 (21:58):
Yeah, the one time that she tried to have a
hot take, she basically showed why she shouldn't talk, right.
Speaker 2 (22:04):
Yeah. So what I'm saying is like, I'm not saying
women can't be great at it, but prove me wrong.
If I'm making a statement based off a fact.
Speaker 1 (22:16):
Prove me wrong.
Speaker 2 (22:17):
I feel I just don't want to sound ignorant because
I don't know what female podcasts and I don't want
I don't want you either. But I'm just saying, like,
as a podcast or found out sound off in the comments,
if y'all watch a female podcast that doesn't anything to
do with men or sex with men, or sex or
your pussy or relationships, and it's just something outside of that,
even if it's a niche one, because I know my
(22:38):
daughter listens to one and it's like a murder mystery joint.
But that's one. Those do very well. Those do very well. Honestly,
I don't know enough about it. Those are more more
of audio audio audio experience. Yeah, bro, I'm the same
way with comedy. I don't watch a lot of comedy
shows because I do the ship. So it doesn't like
(22:59):
it feels like I'm peeking behind the curtains. It's like,
I know, how mad somebody put up some ship. I
forgot it. I don't want to say his name. He
said some ship in the in the comedy group. He
said that comedians should stay and watch each other at
the open mic what the nigga. You sound like an
open mica nigga. The funk out of here. Let me tell
you something. Comedians and that nigga whoever said that, let
(23:23):
me tell you something, dickhead.
Speaker 1 (23:24):
I'm not there to watch other comedians.
Speaker 2 (23:26):
I'm there to do my ship and get the fuck
out of there and possibly make it to another MIC
so I can rework that same Withteriy somewhere else. I'm
not there to fucking nigga. This is not a team sport.
I've talked about this before, son, bro keV is my nigga.
That's my friend. At the end of the day, I
understand me and keV got we know this. I have
a fan base, he has a fan base. We do
two completely different types of comedy. I can't steal Kev's fans.
(23:52):
He can't.
Speaker 1 (23:53):
He can. He can add some of my fans onto
his family.
Speaker 2 (23:57):
But there's not gonna be people to say, oh, Kev's
funny and it's me and be like, oh, Kev's not
funny anymore. Right, That's not how it works now. And
this shit is not a team sports, and like we're
all trying to do the shit to make it bro
So this is not no kombay yai open micers.
Speaker 3 (24:12):
What niggas are really saying is, Yo, when I go
to the open mic, nobody watches my set, and if
all the comics.
Speaker 2 (24:17):
Just came inside, we'd have a full audience.
Speaker 3 (24:20):
Nigga, I'm not trying to hear your five minutes of
mid and we've all heard your bullshit.
Speaker 2 (24:24):
And the open mic, my bag, it ain't. It ain't Uniko,
what Kevin does. It ain't what Jari does and shout
out to him on Wall Street or chronic Guru. It
ain't those right. Your open mic you're doing sucks. There's
some open mic spots that produce an actual audience that
(24:46):
comics are more happy to go to. I'm not going
to no motherfucking falcon hosted by Blake. Nigga, I'm not
going to that bullshit. Tell you know how, Nigga, I
should go there to get a drink, Nigga. I ain't
never performed, Nigga. Lets let me tell you something. I've
I had an argument with my boys the other night
and they were telling me, like, Yo, your social media
(25:06):
is so viral and is so lit that you you
should probably you should probably.
Speaker 1 (25:10):
Just focus on that and like, don't do stand up.
Speaker 2 (25:11):
I'm like, nigga, what Yeah, no stand up is that's
my baby, Like, that's why I do social media now. Granted,
people have easier access to me on social media because
it's right there, my page is open. So yeah, I'm
viral on different platforms, But nigga, that social media shit
could get shut down at any given mover. Yeah, you
(25:32):
don't own that platform.
Speaker 1 (25:33):
I don't own it.
Speaker 2 (25:34):
Instagram could just say fuck you and delete your count.
I think that did happen to you before. Yes, and
I had to build it back up from scratch. Yeah,
I got canceled before. There's nothing. There's nothing guaranteed about
this and own air, and it's no greater feeling than
being on that stage and they screaming your name and
you're making people laugh and after the show people are
(25:55):
hugging you and taking pictures.
Speaker 1 (25:57):
That shit feels amazing to me. Bro Shorty just the
sweet to day.
Speaker 2 (26:00):
She was like, I don't understand how you could work
a nine to five job and then get off, go
work out, shoot your podcast and then run and go
doing a bet.
Speaker 3 (26:08):
How are you not tired at your shows? I'm like,
I'm energized at my show. This show don't feel like
work at all.
Speaker 2 (26:14):
The show. I do everything else so I could look
forward to getting on stage afterwards. Granted, sometimes I don't
like producing on NICO. I don't like having to put
the show together. I don't want to have to deal
with getting an audience there every single week. That's part
of stressful, but the me being on stage part, Like, Yo,
that's what I live for, Nigga. Let me tell you something.
When I got a show coming up, especially if I'm headlining, Bro, Nigga,
(26:37):
my outfit, I'm like, what am I gonna wear? I'm
thinking about what song am I coming out to? Like,
all of these things are running through my mind and
that moment up until you hit that stage. You know
that feeling, bro, Like, especially when you're out of town.
That fucked these in town shows because you know your
friend's gonna be there. But like when we did Miami
or when I did Vegas. Bro, when you're about to
(26:58):
go on that stage, it's like game time, Like, Nigga,
that is nothing.
Speaker 1 (27:03):
It's for me. There's no better feeling than that. Bro.
I'm gonna go out here and I'm going to rock
this ship.
Speaker 2 (27:09):
Bro. It takes years to get to that moment like
it's no longer jitters to me. I know. I have
a habit of and and and eleven years in. It
happens to me every time, two minutes before I hit
the stage, I get my set. Every time, Bromo listen.
(27:30):
It never fails. I don't know what the fuck my
set leaves my head, bro, and I don't remember it
until I'm walking to the stage. Sometimes I remember, I
get the mic, I forget it. My mongo's completely blank,
and this could be a set I've done dozens of times.
That's actually really common.
Speaker 3 (27:46):
It's because the flight or flights that ship is crazy
that your body is releasing so much adrenaline. You're like, yo,
I'm gonna Everything that is not mandatory for me to
survive right now is out the window. Because you you
have your anxious about the show, not that you're nervous
or anything, right, your body naturally is telling you like, hey, yo,
you're about to be in a fight. You're about to
be in a fight, so YO, get prepared. And then
(28:08):
once you get on stage and you give the first
what up to the crowd and everybody's clapping, your mind calms.
Speaker 2 (28:13):
Down, like all right now. I know how I'm getting
into it.
Speaker 1 (28:15):
Have you ever have you ever? Have you ever had
a standing ovation yet?
Speaker 2 (28:18):
Yeah? That it's great. It is. I don't know if y'all.
If y'all watch it, it's cool to listen. And I
like that we're talking about this. I mean we're not
as seasoned. I mean, even me being eleven years people like, why,
it's a long time. I was like, Nigga, that ain't
ship bro this when you got eleven years old, when
you got that's it, you're eleven years old. You got
(28:40):
niggas like Corey Hokum and and and and Bill Bird,
these guys thirty years. It's guys who've been doing it
forty years. Like I'm a baby in this shit still
I'm six, Like Nigga, I literally just headlined for the
first time, like officially headlined last year. I mean I've
done shows why I closed, Yeah, but niggas your headline it. Yeah,
(29:01):
I headlined that show. Like I'm not a headliner now
I am, but like unless you're doing and I'm still
a baby headliner like I mean, like, I mean I
be real, like I can do an hour, yeah, but
a comfortable but like a real headliner can do three
hours nigga. Yeah, you've seen Godfree. Yeah, Chappelle, do you
thiggas could do? He'll do like a seven o'clock show
(29:24):
and do an hour and a half and then do
a nine o'clock show a different hour and a half.
All new material. These niggas will do. There's some there's
things I've heard with some of them. Niggas be up
there three four hours, bro four. Well.
Speaker 3 (29:39):
Chappelle and Dan't Cook have the record for for longest
time on stage.
Speaker 2 (29:43):
They both did the Laugh Factory. I think Dane Cook did.
Speaker 3 (29:46):
It for like sixteen hours and then Chappelle what and
then Chappelle went up there. I might be misquoting it
might it's a long time. Chappelle did it for thirty
minutes longer, and then I think Dane Cook went one
more time and he brought everybody burger king.
Speaker 2 (30:02):
Here's some controversial ship and I would love to see.
Did you ever see what Corey said about Chappelle. Yeah,
I remember that when he said he bombs right. Yeah.
I heard a story about Richard Pryor when he fucking
Marlon Brando because yeah that story no, no, no, not that
one where he did a god bit and made the
crowd cry, what bro list, you gotta hear the and
(30:25):
it and I heard. I didn't hear the bit, but
the way he said it, it was it was who
was explaining. I think it was Harry Mandel. Check this
bit out. He said that Richard Pryor did that ship.
Sounds like it I wish I would have been. And
this is in the seventies. You know, I'm not a
as a comedian. I'm not a Richard Prior nigga? What
(30:48):
I'm Eddie murphynigga? Ya. I've watched a bunch of Here's.
Speaker 1 (30:51):
Why I can't be a Eddie Murphy nigga.
Speaker 2 (30:53):
I think Eddie Murphy is just he's like he's a
student of Richard, right, But how good do you have
to be to only have two specials that were released
almost forty years ago and people still say your name
when they trek about to go. People don't understand Eddie
only did two specials.
Speaker 1 (31:12):
That's it.
Speaker 2 (31:14):
And that's almost forty years ago.
Speaker 1 (31:15):
Bro that's it.
Speaker 2 (31:17):
He's never touched the stage again, broh, And you still
to go, Yeah, he's my goal, He's my greatest of
all time.
Speaker 1 (31:25):
And then you got to think about. Eddie was twenty
one bro.
Speaker 2 (31:28):
Yeah, so charismatic on stage. He could do it all.
Speaker 3 (31:31):
He does impressions, he does stories, he does quick one line.
Speaker 4 (31:34):
Here.
Speaker 2 (31:35):
Here's my controversial thinking about Eddie. He was only twenty one, right,
so he didn't have a lot of life knowledge. I
believe this is just my belief. If Eddie didn't, if
you remove Eddie's impressions, he sucks. No, I'm saying, what
is the what is the memorable things about him? Yo,
(31:57):
Eddie's take on relationships and what its great? I think
it was. No, he still was doing everything was everything
was impersonations. Everything was impersonation when he was like, yo,
when you when a woman gets cheated on it enough
and then she goes to the Bahamas and finds another nigga, right,
(32:18):
and he did the Jamaican dudes accent. No no, no, no,
but just the whole story. But I think if you
remove the accents and the impressions out of it, it's
not good comedy. I'm not gonna let you disrespect it
go like I'm not.
Speaker 1 (32:32):
I'm just saying. I'm just saying he didn't. He couldn't.
Speaker 2 (32:35):
He didn't have much Listen, Eddie, he still goaded. Yeah,
but just for me if you removed it, I mean
all of that ties into who he was. There's so
many other facts.
Speaker 1 (32:44):
I just think that for me, that's what I feel like.
Speaker 2 (32:47):
You're dismissing his whole yo.
Speaker 3 (32:51):
One year old to have the insight he has about family,
his crack, Like when he talked about getting a cracker, like, Yo,
if you haven't eaten in a long time and then
you get a you get a ritz cracker, You're like, oh,
this is a good ass cracker, Yo, Why why is
this so good?
Speaker 2 (33:03):
Is this a saltine nigga? That's an amazing get.
Speaker 3 (33:06):
It's like, yo, you you had the same old pussy
that you've been having.
Speaker 2 (33:10):
You know? You for me?
Speaker 1 (33:13):
And this is me giving I may be giving him
a little too much credit.
Speaker 2 (33:17):
I think that's who Preacher realinds people of I think, Bro,
let me tell something.
Speaker 1 (33:24):
Me and Preacher start reach started a couple of years
before me.
Speaker 2 (33:27):
So I brought him to loud Hooga Lounge, right, and
I think we talked about this and I used to
have to.
Speaker 1 (33:35):
Follow spoken word. Spoken word is trash to me.
Speaker 2 (33:38):
So I hate that ship, bro, And it's so hard
to make the transition from spoken word to to comedy,
and bro he would mark like I was they were.
I hated it because he did it so much better
because me, I'm an EmPATH, so I'm following the energy
in the room. But he knew how to shift it.
(34:02):
And that's actually also love. You can't teach people that.
I like challenge, all right, so boom, some people like that.
I like hostile crowds because I'm like adversarial comedy. This right,
I'm the other guy bar. I'm the other bar guy
where there's a heck hecklers.
Speaker 1 (34:23):
I'm gonna know. I'm a fucking New Yorker, right, so I'm.
Speaker 3 (34:28):
Driving a show where everybody is kind of volatile. They
want to crack because now what they're what they're doing.
What they don't know is that they're giving you a justif.
They're giving you justification for you to be yourself. Will Mills.
The thing about you is if you start attacking the
crowd and they didn't do anything to deserve it, they
(34:49):
pulled back. They were like, Yo, why are you coming
so hard at us? We're not doing nothing. But all
you need is one person to be a dickhead in
the crowd to be like what you got, nigga?
Speaker 1 (34:58):
Are you funny?
Speaker 2 (35:00):
Now? Your whole your.
Speaker 3 (35:02):
Whole set is justified because I'm I'm gonna be an
asshole and you did this.
Speaker 2 (35:07):
So that's what I like.
Speaker 1 (35:08):
I like.
Speaker 2 (35:09):
That's why my favorite comics are Bill Burr, Lewis, C K.
Patrise O'Neill. These guys are New York guys. These are
Northern guys like we we we are. We thrive off
hostile environments like you would fight in the New York crowd.
You would fight like like you would you would, you
would fight to get that audience because they're funny too,
(35:30):
like they're they're also comedians Like I come from an
environment where see your environment was you were always the
funniest guy, right, you know you it was more calm.
I'm from the projects. Everybody's a roaster, everybody's funny, so
I had to be the best of my whole environment
being funny. So it's like this ship to me is
(35:52):
a cakewalk. But also they're not, they're they're I remember
in Vegas, I dealt with a crowd like that at
one of my shows out there, and after I got
up stage, the dude was like you're from New York.
I'm like, yeah, he's like, and he's like, they're not
ready for your type of comedy. You got to go
to another room. And it happened to me in Vegas
like they were pulling back. They were offended, just off
(36:13):
the context of my And that's why I say, me
and you have two different styles of comedy.
Speaker 1 (36:19):
There's some comics.
Speaker 2 (36:20):
Who knows how to walk the line. I can honestly
say I haven't, and you know, don't book me for
a clean comedy set.
Speaker 1 (36:31):
I'm not willing to do it.
Speaker 2 (36:32):
I'm not funny in that state, not to me anyway.
Other people may think like, oh nah, you was funny.
I don't think I am. If I don't think I am,
I'm not going to be funny. But there's comics who
know how to do that. And there's one comic in
particular who's great at that. I think it's Seawan Madden.
(36:53):
Sean Madden. He's underrated, bro Sean Madden Ross because and
I say that for them, is because black people we
are we dictate the funny.
Speaker 1 (37:04):
We have the roughest.
Speaker 2 (37:05):
Lives, and we've we've mastered turned in our pain into
into into into laughter. Yeah. So when a white comic
understands our culture and they don't look the part, they're
gonna be a beast bro. I feel like that's an
easy layup for things like that. Yeah, but they also
still got to be funny because Ross Stones how to
(37:28):
do it very well. I feel like black audiences are
so gentle with white comedians that come out. All we
have to do is like, but they know, no, we
don't know a little bit about the culture, and don't
try to assume you're a part of the culture.
Speaker 1 (37:44):
Come right, you come out there, which is the same
reason we accept the eminem.
Speaker 3 (37:48):
Yeah, it's like, hey, yo, I understand y'all struggle, and
I just want to let y'all know I struggle to
not as much as you, but dodge charger boom.
Speaker 2 (37:57):
And then everybody in the audience is like, oh shit,
he gets us Nigga, Oh hey yo, I don't know
about y'all, but I had to cook ramen noodles myself
growing up.
Speaker 1 (38:04):
It still doesn't make them funnier than us or more depth.
Speaker 2 (38:07):
But and I'm not talking shit, I think that I
do the same ship. On the other side, the other
comic who knows how to do walk. That line is
jar knows how to walk. Then I think, of course
we all do better with white crowds. Like white crowds
fucking adore me. So I'm a god today. It's the
same exact audience.
Speaker 3 (38:24):
All you have to do is not be uh too
dangerous to them, or if you are dangerous, be like yo,
I like y'all, y'all the type of white people that
I like.
Speaker 2 (38:34):
And then white people they feel validated for this thing.
But you know what, Oh, look, as black guy said
he likes me like for instance, like a like a
like a Tony Black right, I don't think. I don't
think he would. I think like him, he would prefer
to perform in front of a white audience.
Speaker 1 (38:55):
I don't know a black audience.
Speaker 2 (38:57):
I'm sorry that he's more of a black comic. If
I prefer white audiences, I prefer a mixed crowd.
Speaker 1 (39:02):
But no, no, no, I'm just no.
Speaker 2 (39:04):
If you ask me, what's the easiest for me, white white,
A white improv bonkers crowd, nigga is if you bro.
Speaker 3 (39:12):
If it's a white audience, I know I'm killing it.
If it's a black audience, I'm a little nervous because
there's so many different types of black audience. Yes, like
every white audience is the same.
Speaker 1 (39:23):
To me, My worst show ever was in front of
a southern black crowd.
Speaker 2 (39:26):
Bro.
Speaker 1 (39:27):
First of all, from New York, and I'm very New York.
Speaker 3 (39:30):
So a southern black crowd is completely different than a
northern New York crowd. And there's an old black crowd
where like, hey, yo, we like the oldies. We don't
want to hear you say nigga too much in front
of us. And then there's a young black crowd that's like, yo,
we don't even know Tevin Campbell.
Speaker 2 (39:44):
Can we talk. I'm twenty three years old, nigga, I
don't know shit. And white people. I hate to say
this once again. Let me let me paraphrase because I
said this at the beginning. We come from laughter, we
come from struggle, so everything is funny that we do.
(40:06):
We we laugh at the wildest ship bro, Like we
have the best sense of humor. White people come to
us for entertainment, so it's like, and you gotta walk,
you gotta be you know, if it could be sucking
and driving real quick, right, And that's the thing that's
why I I I get on it and ship on
(40:27):
white people like like, I'm like, I got more money
than you, Like I let them know, like, hey, listen,
I'm not the guy. You know, I came here to
range over like you're not gonna. I'm not gonna. I'm
not dancing for you and not. But that type of
black commute comic. I know some of those, and you
know some of them work well too. Bro, I cannot stand. Bro.
(40:50):
If it's anything, I hate it's self. It's a new
it's a new way of doing comedy. Self deprecating comics.
That's a thing, bro, and it's very popular, it is. Bro.
I'm Adam saydless, I'm a hero my story. You haven't
watched Adam saying the movie with him getting his ass whooped. No, never, Bro,
I'm never. There's something to it, though. There's a psychology
(41:13):
to an audience member, like yo, if I can laugh
at myself, then you should be able to laugh at yourself.
Speaker 3 (41:17):
So I'm gonna go first, I'm gonna embarrass myself and
now for the rest of the time, y'all gotta know,
like everything is off limits.
Speaker 2 (41:25):
I don't do that. There's different styles of comedy. But
also I have a cheat code because I'm a likable person.
So I'm gonna go up there and be myself.
Speaker 1 (41:35):
I think you're you're non threatening, yeah, but.
Speaker 2 (41:40):
Non threatening could be not funny, real quick, non threat only.
But you know what those facts that ship, But that
that's only what black people though, Like black crowds will
do that to you. They think you're combo.
Speaker 3 (41:53):
Like, well, if you're a non threatening white, you're a
self deprecating white. Right, If you're non threatening, then white
people are gonna let you know, Hey, I know I
look nerdy, I know, I know I'm not cool, but.
Speaker 1 (42:03):
That Gus ship.
Speaker 2 (42:04):
Yeah, I'm not comge.
Speaker 1 (42:09):
I love Gus, but that's that's what he does.
Speaker 2 (42:12):
I mean, Gus got a couple of different things in
his bag, like a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. That's Gus.
You gotta stop that. Gus got a couple of different
things in his bag. Let's move along, let's get into
I even hate to do this, bro, let's speak of
speaking of self deprecated. Bro, do you have any I
(42:36):
don't think you're into politics at all now, but I
saw something nasty, nasty, bro. Like, first of all, if
you look at the history of politics itself, right, like
you know, it's election years, so I won't talk about
it briefly. Republicans was always always the party that was
more progressive, right, Abraham Lincoln was a Republican. You know,
(43:01):
at some point it changed, but I don't think the
message changed ever. I think everybody's racist. First of all,
I don't think they really give a fuck about black people.
But I also think this day and age, black people,
we really need to understand how fucking powerful we are,
because the level of pandering only to black people is crazy.
(43:23):
Like the people they're going to get. Trump already know
a rednecks racist. I got y'all. I don't got to
convince y'all, nothing, Hulk Hogan, Kid Rock. But then he
got Kodak Black. Then he the nigga, got Jill Rappers,
he got Chef Genius, Sleepy too. No, no, he got
(43:44):
these niggas talking at rallies. Right, he got a little
pump talking little pump. Yeah. Just but in Trump's defense, right,
He's always fuck with rappers, always been.
Speaker 1 (44:00):
He's always around the culture. He's a New York cat.
He always fucked.
Speaker 2 (44:04):
With rappers, the rappers, always with everybody. Everybody in the
nineties have a trump ball. So they can get, like
like the narrative they're trying to spend about the racist ship.
I don't like it, Bro. It's like it's like, I
don't like it. It's nasty, it's it's it's low hanging fruit.
So for people who are not hip to who Trump is,
they'll it's very once you put race the racism narratives
(44:27):
in front of black people, it's the number. Yeah we
buy number. And I hate every time.
Speaker 1 (44:33):
Bro.
Speaker 2 (44:33):
I hate it, Bro, I hate it so much, And
all you need is one little thing that may implicate
it is like, oh, yeah, he's a fucking racist whatever.
Then I then I see then I look at ship
that uh you know the Democrats do. Kamala Harris Bro.
Speaker 1 (44:48):
She out there in Atlanta, Coonan chucking and driving.
Speaker 2 (44:50):
Bro.
Speaker 1 (44:51):
She got she got Megdue Stallion.
Speaker 2 (44:53):
Bro.
Speaker 1 (44:54):
Megdae Stallion was twerky.
Speaker 2 (44:57):
I already don't really like Meg. It's like, and I
know when you when men say that and they're like, oh,
you don't.
Speaker 1 (45:04):
Do like Meg. Meg look good doing it. It's a
good looking girl.
Speaker 2 (45:08):
But I don't like Meg. I'm not a big Meg person.
My thing with Meg is is like, Bro, you went
and got her for what who is she for?
Speaker 1 (45:20):
Really?
Speaker 2 (45:21):
Son? The audience, the audience watching the black woman vote
is so important. The audience watching it's like yo, like
I said, And the reason why I made a distinction
between Trump is because, like yo, Trump has always been
like that for the last forty years, He's been fucking
with black people for real. Genuinely, Trump went and got Ambarros, right,
(45:43):
that's his that's his go, that's him trying to pander.
But he's genuinely always fucked with the black crack black people.
He's always he's always fuck with black people, whether it's
racist or not.
Speaker 1 (45:54):
Whatever, he fuck with black people.
Speaker 2 (45:57):
This shit. Don't fuck with white black people. Bro. I
I'm not gonna play it on the show because I
know how YouTube is.
Speaker 1 (46:04):
Now.
Speaker 2 (46:05):
You're weaponizing your blackness when you've never acknowledged to be black.
Speaker 1 (46:10):
She's always said East Asian.
Speaker 3 (46:11):
Yeah, every four years, she got to come out and
be like, hey, look I got hot sauce.
Speaker 2 (46:15):
She's always that I was Hillary. She no, she walked
out of the versus battle. Bro. She literally is now black,
and she's always been you you're you're, you got a
black dad. But she she leverages which which what things
she want to be. Yeah, that's politics. It's nasty. No.
Speaker 1 (46:36):
But the thing about it is.
Speaker 2 (46:39):
Black people are so fucking oh it's like yeah black,
Yeah i'm black today.
Speaker 1 (46:47):
But you didn't hear what she said last week? Why
wasn't it death?
Speaker 2 (46:51):
Say? How are you able to weaponize Like I've never
heard Obama say I'm white. He's fifthy me saying white.
He's never said I'm white. He's never done that. Yeah, well,
didn't let him do that.
Speaker 1 (47:01):
He's never done that.
Speaker 2 (47:02):
And now now she's weaponizing her blackness to to to pander.
Speaker 3 (47:09):
Back to Now that you've brought politics up, what about
Candace Owns. She got a she's a female with a
podcast that's not about sex or men, and it's popular.
Speaker 2 (47:21):
She is and I love her. Yeah, I mean, Canda,
I'm glad you said that. There you go. I watch her.
You see what I'm saying. Yea, So it doesn't have
anything to do she's good. Yeah, there's no sex involved.
She's interesting, she's smart, she's knowledgeable. I watch her, so
women can do that. Yeah, there you go. Okay, cool,
(47:45):
I stand corrected. All right, cool, that's but but but okay,
we'll let that be a message to the bitches who
I'm talking to, then you don't have to just talk
about be interesting. Kids always as interesting as Funck is.
They're definitely not sitting around a circle having these conversations.
Speaker 1 (47:59):
And kid owner was a dolo, like she's doing it
by herself.
Speaker 2 (48:03):
Okay, but you see how but black people shopped on
her though, yeah they I feel like black people were
coming around the canis Ons for a second, and then
she got like real Christian. She's like super Catholic right now,
is she? Yeah, she's like like shipping on people for uh.
I think she she had a whole part where she
was shipped on mbur rolls because Rose was like, yeah,
I don't know if I'm conservative, I'm definitely right. I
(48:24):
think is a whole. Yeah, she's a bad.
Speaker 1 (48:27):
No, she's a whole. She's a bad She had to
fucking slut walk like.
Speaker 2 (48:31):
Yeah, but her Christian values can't allow her.
Speaker 1 (48:34):
To see but watch this, but watch this though.
Speaker 2 (48:37):
I like that she can do that because I'm voting
for Trump like I always do. But I also called
out his part the party for bringing out hook Hogan.
Speaker 1 (48:45):
That was goofy. You see you have to be able
to do that.
Speaker 2 (48:49):
Yeah, just like I can say that that that that
Meg the stallionship was goofy, that Hogan ship was goofy.
Speaker 3 (48:56):
You voted for Trump even though he's trying to get
blanket immunity for for police everywhere.
Speaker 2 (49:02):
Is that a proven fact? Is he is he trying
to do that? Because I don't believe that. I mean,
I think he said it on multiple pod blanket immunity regardless,
blanket immunity for all police officers, but also this right.
Speaker 1 (49:14):
I can also not agree with some of the things
he does, some.
Speaker 2 (49:17):
Of the I mean, that's a that's a danger, but
that's that.
Speaker 1 (49:20):
It's me. It's still not well. I don't get in trouble.
Speaker 2 (49:23):
It needs to do you. It doesn't affect me, and
the FFAC niggas will get a jumble. I don't get
in trouble, bro, police don't bother me. I don't think
police gonna get more brave and start fucking with me
because he changed the policy. Like I'm still gonna continue
to litter, say where I live, like black people get
customer right, Like like this is the thing I'm saying.
Black people get scared of these policies. Yeah, because you
(49:44):
fucking up niggas. You know what I mean. You're good
till you not. It doesn't bother me. Like like like said,
I don't know. You've never been racially profiled. Absolutely anybody
you could be. But watch this though, we're gonna be
racially profile because we are black. Don't lose yourself in
the midst of it. That's what I'm saying. Like, you
(50:05):
can be for policy, you can be against policy, but
you gotta have you have to know who you are, right.
I know how to act acquarterly in that situation. Yeah,
I'm not about to be out there fighting and again,
I'm trying to get home to my family. Yeah, at
the end of the amst go to my family. Nigga,
I got lawyer money and I'll and I'll put a
lawsuit against you. Period. You got your body cam on.
(50:28):
I'm gonna turn my camera on if I feel like
that's necessary. But for the most part, I'm driving my car.
What am I I'm not speeding, I have my seatbelt on,
my guns are registered, all of that good shit. How
often do you actually come across a gung hole cop
that want to kill somebody?
Speaker 1 (50:44):
Bro?
Speaker 3 (50:45):
So what because I'm just gonna argue for what the
people in the audience or I'm gonna say so, you're
saying that these black people who have been wrongfully shot
or wrongfully murdered did something to provoke these police officers.
Speaker 2 (50:58):
No, not all of them. Absolutely not most cases. A
lot of times they do. But this is not a
protection for the police. But let me say it in
my perspective, right, if you are not wearing a uniform
and you're not a cop, remove cops out of the
situation and let's just be humans for a second. If
a white boy came to me in a threatening manner
(51:20):
and he's walking towards my vehicle, I'm blowing his fucking
head off, bro, same thing I would do for a
black dude. And anybody coming here threatening manner, I right,
the bed arms I'm licensed to carry. You're done, right.
Speaker 1 (51:32):
We put these labels on certain people because of their position. Right.
Speaker 2 (51:36):
So, although that cop intentions, some cops are ill intent
some of them. A lot of these motherfuckers are gung
hole nigga. Listen, I'm from New York Son, I'm from
the home of the disrespecting police. I done told cops
way more cops to suck my dick. Then have a
good day. Officer.
Speaker 1 (51:56):
I'm from that, nigga, I tell you, suck my dick.
Speaker 2 (51:59):
I'm that.
Speaker 1 (52:00):
I'm from that.
Speaker 2 (52:00):
But I'm older now, bro, I got a family to
think of, you know what I'm saying. They got kids
that go home too, So I know a lot of
times the way we are, we think about our rights
and all that. Ask yourself, when this cop is coming
at you incorrect, did you do anything to provoke the
situation to happen? Be realistic, bro, that's accountability. I always
(52:23):
watch to say. I saw Dave East on the video
a long time ago, right, Dave East was in the
hood in Harlem, and I think this is even before
that they made they legalize marijuana. They maybe at the
time they did. But whatever, You're driving a Rolls Royce
through the hood, we smoke, blowing out the call, y'all,
drinking in the car. You get pulled over and you
go live on the camera talking about, oh, they harassing us.
(52:47):
You know they're doing their job. You gave them a reason. No, no, no,
maybe they are harassing you. But that's how cops are.
They want to fuck you up if you already have
an insight to think that cops, if you a black man,
who think cops want to kill black people, Why are
you giving them a reason to fuck with you? That's
my thing. If you already think they're like that, then
(53:09):
you move different. Niggas is moving stupid? How you drive
around with a suspended license, nigga and no registration on
your car and then you're talking about they harassing you.
Speaker 1 (53:20):
I wasn't doing anything well, just by chance.
Speaker 2 (53:25):
You know, he ran your plate and he saw your
shit with a spending Have your paperwork right at all times.
I say, if a cop does harass me when he
pulls me over, I ain't understand how to hand him
my shit. You're getting concealed weapons license, you're getting license
and registration, hands on a steering wheel, camera, start the role.
I'm ready for you. I'm ready for you. Bro. If
(53:47):
he's some gungo dickhead and he wanted to do something,
that's all him. I'm not going to join him to
where he got a fight. The cop is not going
to have a fight bro in court with me. God forbid.
He's not one of those dudes and do something to me.
But in the meantime, I'm doing everything by the book
because you gotta you gotta be able to tell a
story later. Bro, don't go out like that. That's what
(54:09):
I'll be trying to tell niggas. You want to fight
for your rights right now, Nigga, wait, nigga, do it
in court. Do it in court, son, like they do.
Do it in court. Bro, That's all I'm saying. Son.
Speaker 1 (54:19):
But you even talking like this with this much logic, niggas,
Oh you'll cool, you will sut up, shut.
Speaker 2 (54:24):
Your stupid ass something.
Speaker 5 (54:25):
Now.
Speaker 3 (54:25):
This is one of the first times I like, I
genuinely agree with everything you saying. Well, I feel like
what you're saying is be responsible and to have a
little bit of accountability always.
Speaker 2 (54:33):
That's it.
Speaker 1 (54:33):
Have your shirt, listen with everything I told you.
Speaker 2 (54:39):
And I'm walking around the way I walk around, and
I'm moving the way I'm moving. If a cop pulled
me over, pull me out, beat me up, golf a bit,
shot me, or something like that, he one was racist
and did something to hurt me, Bro, Because I know
I didn't do anything to provoke this shit. It's just
like being in a relationship. Anything you do has consequences
to it. Don't contribute to the constant. So what I'm saying,
(55:01):
son at all, don't contribute to it at all. Let
him be if you want to be a racist dickhead,
let him be a racist dickhead. Sit there and take
that ship and later on, nigga, pull up with your lawyer. Nigga,
pull up with that lawyer. You're gonna win. Son, You're
gonna win his body. Camera's on. Your camera recorded everything,
your paperwork was right. You have no drugs in the car,
the seatbelt was on, you was doing the speed limit.
(55:22):
Everything you did everything by the book. This is all
documented information. You're going to win. Bro.
Speaker 1 (55:30):
Beat a coward that. Go home and tell the story.
Speaker 2 (55:32):
Nigga.
Speaker 3 (55:32):
There was recently just a girl who she called the
police and the victim victim and that that was a
nasty nigga. He was like, Yo, I'll shoot the fuck.
Speaker 2 (55:44):
Out of you. I'll shoot and did it. And also
they got it on Bro. There's no justice in this
situation because that woman lost her life. Unfortunately, that's the
that's the one situation where this motherfucker was looking for
a reason. I ever heard her record Horden of him.
Speaker 1 (56:04):
Uh being reprimanded by his captain or something like that.
Speaker 2 (56:08):
Yeah, he had mad ship on his ship, like multiple
emething with Derek Chalvin, the dude that killed George Floyd
mad reprimands. Like I said, you're going to get those
situations where.
Speaker 1 (56:21):
It's unavoidable.
Speaker 2 (56:23):
But what makes a cop different from the little blood
or crip nigga walking down the street to do something
to you. They're the same person, bro, They're the same person.
And listen, let me be go on record by saying this.
I view all police as pieces of ship. I think
(56:45):
they are. Bro. I don't trust no cops niggas. I
don't deal with them. I don't call them for nothing.
I'll call them if somebody broke in my crib and
I wasn't there, because if I was there, somebody's dying.
I don't trust police. And because I don't trust police,
that's why I moved the way I move. I don't
move with trust for the police. I also think there
are way more good cops than bad cops. I think
(57:08):
they're way more good cops than Yeah, bro, I don't.
But my thing is, if you don't trust somebody, why
are you giving those people you don't trust a reason
to do something to you. Yeah, I just don't even
give you access to It's a contradicting our argument. You
say me comp sing shit, nigga fucked the police. Okay,
so why are you giving these niggas a reason to
(57:28):
talk to you? Then, Bro, I don't give them reason
to talk to me because I don't trust them. Period.
Makes sense to me. Yeah, man, But anyway, that's enough
for the politics political shit. Uh, let's get into the
fund ship. Bro, let's get into the fund shit. So
earlier today, yesterday, I sent all of you a fucking
oh you know, before we get into that, let's do
(57:49):
this real quick. Oh yeah, I wanted to see this.
Yachty said this Love Yachty. Lil Yachty said Atlanta runs
the culture. He said that Atlanta.
Speaker 3 (58:11):
Don't let your New York bias get bro.
Speaker 1 (58:15):
Coach is a big word.
Speaker 2 (58:16):
Yeah, but I feel like I don't agree with that statement,
but I feel like somebody has to say that. I'm
gonna take a step further. He said, Atlanta runs the
culture in fashion too. Okay, let me go and say
this real quick, bro, nobody is trying to dress like
(58:39):
Little Yachty except Drake. Nobody. Nobody nobody dressing like that
nigga son. Atlanta has no influence on fashion at all?
Speaker 1 (58:51):
None?
Speaker 2 (58:52):
Zero? What's the Atlanta fashion? Well, first of all, if
you ask anybody who's not from Atlanta, what are they
gonna say? Come on, what do you think the general
consensus is of Atlanta fashion for men's like some gay ship? Right,
see right? This is gay that that that didn't that didn't.
(59:12):
If that's the thought, how do you run fashion? I
mean fashion is a feminine and homosexual lead. Well right, well,
we're speaking of heterosexual men who are from a hip
hop stance. I would think Atlanta stands on their own.
They have an Atlanta thing I will always end forever
(59:33):
until that changes. Give it to New York always. And
that's not even because I'm from New York. It's because
every because one New York is the fashion capital of
the world.
Speaker 1 (59:46):
There's a lot of weird ship that.
Speaker 2 (59:48):
But if you see like it's certain, I think all
for me personally, I'll put Florida in front of Atlanta.
I think Florida even has their own thing with Nigga Wicks,
it's a Florida thing. Is Aaron fashion synonymous? Yeah? When
(01:00:08):
it comes to black people, this because we'll look at
another black person like, oh yeah, I'm doing that too.
Speaker 1 (01:00:13):
I don't think. I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:00:14):
I don't know how white. I don't I always ask
myself if I was white, how would I do my hair?
Speaker 1 (01:00:20):
I don't know what I long.
Speaker 2 (01:00:21):
I don't know what the fuck I would do with
my hair if I was white. But I do know
this when it comes to like niggas be thinking like
niggas who can't typically from the hood, who from the hood,
and they get money, they'll just go to Gucci, and
I call them mannequin shoppers. You just wear Gucci Gucci.
(01:00:42):
That's not fashion, bro, Like, you don't even know how
to put shit together. Fashion. When I say fashion, I
mean I'm talking about when jay Z say, and I
don't wear Jerseys, I'm thirty plus, give me a give
me a fresh Yankees fit of a nigga, a button up,
and then everybody do that Like you just said something
that was also like fifteen years ago. No, no, I'm just
(01:01:04):
saying something like that. So so you have you have
sat you have certain you have certain errors. Right, No,
we do. We have the Internet, and the Internet dictates
with because at one point, when I first came out here,
niggas was wearing jean shorts down to their ankles, big
giant denim, fool boot, Platinum shirts, big shirts, classic reebox.
(01:01:26):
Florida's was some of the worst stress niggas I've seen
in my life because there was no internet to marry
us together. And when I came down here, it was
obvious it was ivoys. Oh you're a New York nigga
fitted hats. I had a kogie like the koogie knitted
sweaters on Timberland boots. It was obvious. Now everybody's wearing
Timberlin boots. Because the Internet kind of dictates fashion. There's
(01:01:47):
no separation, like niggas wear Nike Tech, niggas wear Nike
Tech sweatsuits, and everybody's doing it in the fucking country.
Speaker 1 (01:01:55):
So you don't know where it started at, but there was.
Speaker 2 (01:01:57):
It was. Fashion was a regional thing. Like if I
came out here thissed the nigga Platinum foobl bum ass ship,
he probably said, yeah, look at your ugly ass sweater.
Because fashion was a regional thing. That makes sense.
Speaker 1 (01:02:09):
Yeah, it was regional. It wasn't like, oh, we're all
dressing the same.
Speaker 2 (01:02:12):
So when Yati says that, he's saying that niggas is
trying to dress like Atlanta niggas.
Speaker 1 (01:02:17):
Nobody listen.
Speaker 2 (01:02:19):
The staple y'all got is gay ship like y'all like
yall niggas is bro. The first the first nigga to
wear it dressed was Andre three thousand. That was that
was a rapper, a.
Speaker 1 (01:02:31):
Big rapper that did it. Then young thug with the dress.
Speaker 2 (01:02:34):
Y'all niggas are the paining yall nails, weird rubber rubber
bands in your hair, y'all niggas, the sheer shirts and
all that.
Speaker 1 (01:02:41):
These niggas dressed like women.
Speaker 2 (01:02:42):
Bro. Ain't nobody trying to do that. So I have
an opinion on it. I'm trying to go back to Atlanta,
so I fuck with Atlanta, Okay, but don't say niggas
and YACHTI said it. Of all people, if Future said that,
it would probably get some energy or Migo's maybe tuh
somebody like that, somebody somebody who got influenced, ya ain't.
(01:03:04):
I'm not saying yay y'ally is definitely not irrelevant, but
it ain't nobody fucking paying attention to him. Drake dresses
like him. That weird ass baggy shit he had on
the golf course. Did you see that Bro, Why because
it's in a magazine, nig can say, oh, this is fashion,
like they say the weirdo shit is fashion, That's what
(01:03:24):
it is.
Speaker 1 (01:03:24):
I guess it's a type of fashion, but nobody's doing that.
Speaker 2 (01:03:27):
Bro. Yeah, it's like anti meta, anti meta right now, right.
So unfortunately I got a heart out, bro, y'alla be out? Yeah,
Oh damn. I wanted to get into the song ship. Yeah,
you know what, I'm probably do it with myself. I
just want to let y'all know my song choice. Can
I tell you what my song choice was?
Speaker 1 (01:03:47):
Yeah, you tell me something, I'm gonna pause it and
then I'm gonna do it, all right.
Speaker 3 (01:03:50):
Yeah, So it's uh gutt his verse and uh bet
and bedrock really yeah, yeah, gotta gut his verse in
uh in Young Money's vetter Rock.
Speaker 2 (01:03:59):
It's the worst. Okay, we're gonna play it, but we'll
be back in one second, y'all. keV got a head out,
he got the dirty bingo tonight and I'm gonna take
over from here, so I'll be right back in one second, y'all.
I appreciate y'all. And then there was one so yeah, y'all,
it's me. I'm back I'm dolo. It's just all me
sitting here by my lonesome. keV had to go. Ray
(01:04:22):
is not here, so it is just me, guys. This
is the way it was for three years, two years.
So it feels a little good. I missed my team,
but you know, we got a show to do, right,
so listen. So this is the segment I was talking about. Now.
I wish my team was here to do this with me,
because would love their reactions to it too. But just
like they gotta be like y'all, like the audience, and
(01:04:42):
they gotta listen to the goddamn show now.
Speaker 1 (01:04:45):
So this segment is the worst.
Speaker 2 (01:04:50):
I wanted everybody to pick their worst verse they ever
heard in their life, all right, so they all sent
them in Jason. Me and Jason were talking about this
verse three year. Y'all know, that's my best friend. keV
gave me his best version. I heard him say what
it was. It was a gutta gutter he said it already.
He shouldn't have said it. You know. We just played
it on the show and then Race and hers. So
(01:05:11):
let's start it out without further ado. First, we're gonna
get into it. It's Ray says her verse. The worst
verse she ever heard was Little B verse. Let me
go to it real quick. So this is Ray's verse. Yes,
so it's Little Be. What is this ship now? Mind you?
(01:05:33):
Little b is on my list of one of the
worst rappers of all time, hands down, one of the
worst rappers you've ever hear in your life. He's definitely
top in the top five worst rappers of all time.
This verse is Grove Street Party freestyle. I think it's
the freestyle. It's Little Be verse. So let's go and
(01:05:57):
listen to this. If we gotta go lyric for lyric,
let's go to But this is raised worst ship she
ever heard of her life.
Speaker 1 (01:06:03):
So let's go what I'll further do and it's a
little beat.
Speaker 6 (01:06:06):
Let's go, Yeah, I do my thing, bitch, Westside Young
Bays guy came in with the ball of ice out
chain its top ridge on that same ship.
Speaker 2 (01:06:17):
Come on, son yead, this is pretty bad. Joe, y'all
can listen. I gotta sit through, y'all gotta sit there
with me. So just you know what I mean, Let's
get it done. Let's get it done, y'all. Fifty five
holes on my dig.
Speaker 6 (01:06:31):
Bitch is Christmas straight west Side Bay area. Bitch our
grave from pretty boys, shit banks, God for.
Speaker 1 (01:06:39):
This nigga is garbage. Bro Lord, have mercy.
Speaker 2 (01:06:44):
On like a cradle, and you niggas can't stop me.
Speaker 1 (01:06:47):
Nothing wrong?
Speaker 6 (01:06:51):
It is still west side south south to wis Young Bays.
Speaker 4 (01:06:55):
Guy with that fifty five one a seven minutes to eleven,
bitch with that tiny shirt, wows, I'm on that base.
Speaker 2 (01:07:06):
Oh don't understand, No, nothing wrong, flank.
Speaker 5 (01:07:13):
The thing thing man, brof top.
Speaker 4 (01:07:16):
I'm a wolf pack head at this is just crazy,
and I paint you up here to the man. Think
about it.
Speaker 1 (01:07:22):
No, no, I can't do it no more.
Speaker 2 (01:07:24):
Y'all very good pick, good pick, But can I get
my Can I get my fifty nine seconds back? Jesus
christis niggas garbage. I'm glad we ain't gonta hear from him.
No more. I don't know where he at, but whatever
he doing, I hope he's staying out the booth. All right,
So next to pull up, let's do uh, let's do
(01:07:46):
Calves Cav had gutta gutters verse on bed rock. I
think cav just don't like gutta guttar. The verse is trash,
but I've heard way worse ship than this. It's actually
kind of bearable, you know what I mean. So to
me it wasn't that bad. But if it's caves worse,
(01:08:08):
that's his worst cave must be listening to some good
ass music.
Speaker 1 (01:08:11):
Because this is this is really ain't that bad. So
let's got it.
Speaker 2 (01:08:14):
This is a version where she's his verse wing. I
listened to the whole song and then we're gonna get
to the good stuff, y'all. So this is Calves. It's
gotta Gutter's verse, which is only damn twenty five second verse. Well,
thank god, we ain't got to sit through it this
ship for though so long. So this is Gutta Gutter's
verse on bad Rock. Let's go like the way you walk,
(01:08:36):
and if you walking my way, I'm never read boo.
Now let's fly away. I'm try let's.
Speaker 7 (01:08:41):
Five please side with all kind of space.
Speaker 2 (01:08:44):
I let you beat it, judge, and I'm the case.
I'm STEVIEE know, Stevie wonder she don't even want up
because she knows she.
Speaker 8 (01:08:56):
Fad and I gotta grocery.
Speaker 2 (01:09:00):
It definitely was god. It definitely was garbage. It definitely
was garbage, garbage, But I've heard way worse, Kevy. I
think that was a fast pick for you. I don't
think you really did your research, Brokelvin.
Speaker 1 (01:09:18):
I'm gonna need a different pick from you.
Speaker 2 (01:09:19):
Son. It wasn't if that's your worst thing cool. You
want me to listen to some real good music, because
I've heard way worse. So let's get into Jason. Jason,
who is the producer on the show. So in the nineties,
that's where you got your real terrible rap at because
people don't even talk about it. But there was a
(01:09:42):
group back in the nineties called the Fool Snickings. I
don't know if y'all remember this, but there's an era
of hip hop where this shit was real cartoony. It
was real cartoony bars, it was nasty. It was nasty
bars going on back.
Speaker 1 (01:09:58):
Then, Marry.
Speaker 2 (01:10:00):
It was a creative time in hip hop where hip
hop was really trying to find a place. It was ever,
where niggas was just trying out new shit. In this ever,
it was fun, you know what I mean? But this
this shit has no replay value. So this is foods
niggas and the leader the Fools Niggas, who I think
(01:10:21):
was the leader because he was like the most animated nigga,
Chip Fool. It was a song called Breakdown, and me
and Jason as kids, we might have even liked this song,
but as we started to get older, we started to
really analyze this shit and were like, Yo, what is
this nigga talking about? Y'all want to talk about some
(01:10:42):
goofy ass shit. This shit is goofy, goofy.
Speaker 1 (01:10:50):
So I'm a players. It's chip Fool's verse.
Speaker 2 (01:10:53):
On. Let me just go right to the verse. I
got the tom stampoint in the first first words in
that bad But this song is called Breakdown. If you
guys are interested in hearing the whole song, y'all may
think this is This is some real whull framed Roger Rabbit.
(01:11:16):
Just listen to it, y'all. So this is Jason's pick
for his worst verse of all time. That's Sam's because
this coun all right. So here's a town. Just be
prepared to be bouncing off the walls. So this nigga
is about to be on some cartoon out of this
(01:11:36):
world ship. So without further ado, we got chipped full
with Jason's worst verse of all time. Here we go.
Speaker 7 (01:11:44):
Down, ti Ue, I can't be king like a nigga.
Stuff you be taking a box still like fos.
Speaker 2 (01:11:54):
What's.
Speaker 1 (01:11:56):
It's just so, it's just all sound effects.
Speaker 2 (01:12:00):
It's just it's it's bad. It's bad. Oh cheting me
to my pots. Oh my gosh, hold on, stup.
Speaker 7 (01:12:09):
Up the hiccups that night something and they tracks jumping
Joe Hooles the fast.
Speaker 2 (01:12:13):
This niggas that jumping your fast. This nigga is not
talking about anything. He's talking about nothing, Ladies and gentlemen,
he's not talking about nothing right now, don't.
Speaker 7 (01:12:27):
Make some fund I see twice like dung dust and
my name wat stuff like they can't you tell them?
Speaker 5 (01:12:32):
I'm no go they don't.
Speaker 8 (01:12:33):
No't means be I long hands with black guys, the macs,
the rich is not my scooples. Some damon I'm going
from suck me fuls from print from I got secrets from.
Speaker 2 (01:12:45):
Don't like yo go, I'm I'm changing his grip stingers
are like yok'm on no like yokom on No. What
is on? No oh no doesn't mean anything. It's her name.
I gotta run it back a little. I want y'all
to hear how much nonsense this niggas talking. This ship
(01:13:08):
is nonsense. Salute chip food the fools, niggas. This ship
has no replay value, y'all niggas was this is goofy
and it is trash. It's really trash. I'm adjacent on this.
This is bad. Please took all me up.
Speaker 7 (01:13:22):
I'll switch up pip slip up, pick up, switch up,
pee up, sit up, up, hup, cut up, look away,
peak ups and that breaks my fool snicksack and it freaks.
Speaker 2 (01:13:30):
And what's up with that? He gosh, oh son, I see.
Speaker 8 (01:13:40):
With my trunk attack, I'll making your pensil.
Speaker 2 (01:13:43):
But now what's back that? Look up?
Speaker 7 (01:13:45):
This creek comes out sleep. When it's time that creek
we roll back deeper in this gets time to tick.
It comes the final freaking down.
Speaker 2 (01:13:53):
Nigga said, hey comes to five six freak. The nigga
told the world he was five for six, so little
these he's five six yo. Being five to six is crazy.
Sorry to all you show up it being five to
six is as a grown man. That's the best a child.
Well y, this quacks don't sleep.
Speaker 7 (01:14:14):
When it's time that creek, we wrote that deeper and
this time it comes the final freaking down.
Speaker 2 (01:14:20):
Nasty and fucking worked out. So that was Jason's worst
verse of all time, chip full of the food snickings
with breakdown.
Speaker 1 (01:14:31):
Now here comes my pick.
Speaker 2 (01:14:35):
And this is absolutely, to me, the worst verse of
all time. Let me find the song. The song is
called shiit. What's it called the fuck? God damn it.
I'm drawing a blank showing proof. Song's gonna showing proof.
Now I'm gonna tell you who's on this song. And
(01:14:57):
you would think this is gonna be the illly song
you've ever heard in your life. This song as jay Z,
first of all, an unlikely group of guys, and a
lot of people don't even know the song is in existence,
but it is.
Speaker 1 (01:15:12):
And I remember the song as a kid.
Speaker 2 (01:15:13):
It's jay Z. Well, first of all, it's Big Daddy
Kane's song. So it's Big Daddy Kane, jay Z, Sauce
money Shay, he ain't the rugged child, old dirty bastard.
And then another nigga on it, and I believe this
is the same Scoop who was Big Daddy Kane's backup dancer.
(01:15:36):
So I guess Cain wanted to give his backup dancer
a shot at rappin'. Typically, you would let the best
verse lead, but Cain had the bright idea to let
school lead. And in my opinion, this is the worst
(01:15:58):
word verse I've ever heard of my life. The voice,
the bars, everything about this verse is It's the worst
verse I ever heard of my life. If you watch
the video, the nigga's fit is crazy. The nigga got
some one piece Dicky shit on, dressed like Michael Maya.
(01:16:20):
He got some Michael Maya's denim, cal kin I shit on.
It's nasty, it's huge, it's open. I hope he's okay.
I hope he's alive and well, but I won't let
you know, nigga. In my personal opinion, this is the
worst rap verse ever heard of my life. And I
think that's why nobody ever heard this song. Three point
(01:16:42):
one million views, the reason why nobody this song never
blew up because think at this collaboration jay Z, Big Daddy, Kane, Olderty, Bassid,
Shahim Sauce Money.
Speaker 1 (01:16:53):
That is a crazy combination.
Speaker 2 (01:16:56):
These are all these are great and in School bleeding
the way, you gotta tell me what I think, but
what I further Ado the worst rap verse in history,
in my personal opinion, School with his verse on showing proof.
(01:17:19):
Here we go.
Speaker 5 (01:17:23):
Hey, laugh, time thinger, you see.
Speaker 2 (01:17:27):
What I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (01:17:29):
Ha ha, hey man man man, niggas are he rapping.
This ship is trash trash.
Speaker 2 (01:17:40):
Started over again?
Speaker 5 (01:17:48):
Hey, laugh, tip finger, My man's right behind. You can't
pull the trigger.
Speaker 9 (01:17:53):
I'm from that hell with it this rip and I
be on your hands like Bob joined that wind child.
Speaker 2 (01:18:01):
And be on your assteint pinks on the windshield. Who
it gets worse, it gets worse. Listen, shit, I cut hand.
Speaker 9 (01:18:10):
You still can't get no walks different? And then with
book we was playing cards.
Speaker 2 (01:18:14):
Nigga said, I couldn't hand. You still couldn't get no parts.
You couldn't then a scooping you were playing cards. That
ship was so hilarious back in the nineties when niggas
still didn't know how to work with words during raps,
and they would stretch out a one syllable word to
make it sound hard.
Speaker 1 (01:18:28):
This ship was nasty.
Speaker 9 (01:18:31):
Still can't get no walks different? And then with book
we was playing cards. But if I got beeped in
the time for cold wreck, my gun is like a
oh and be taking mad niggas.
Speaker 2 (01:18:39):
The men pause first of all, but I'm gonna play
this part for y'all, right, and I'm gonna let y'all
see the ship. This is some foresight that he did
that nobody peeped. I peeped it.
Speaker 1 (01:18:52):
So pause for the verse of ball. The nigga said,
my gun is my gun? Is that good?
Speaker 2 (01:18:57):
He said, what you said? What do you say?
Speaker 5 (01:19:01):
Even in time for cold? My gun is like a hole?
And be taking mad niggas the bed.
Speaker 2 (01:19:06):
The niggas said, my gunners, I got home taking mad
niggas the bad. But on that part in particular, when
he said my gunners, I got hold and be taking
mad niggas the bed. At the part where he said
I'd be taking mad niggas the bed, you have a
young mister c rest in peace shaking his head. Yes,
as he's saying, I'll be taking mad niggas the bed.
Speaker 1 (01:19:28):
What's the odds of that happening?
Speaker 2 (01:19:29):
Because as we all know, it was revealed later on
that mister C took a bunch of niggas to bed,
and at that very part moment in that verse he
said that mister C is shaking his head. Yes, nobody
knew it at the moment. Some foresight for your ass
that I picked up on, so check this out in.
Speaker 5 (01:19:52):
Time for cold. My gun is like a ho and
be taking mad niggas.
Speaker 1 (01:20:00):
You're still cutting battle?
Speaker 5 (01:20:01):
So what you gromed England? You great? You're burning stroll.
I don't stinktion night.
Speaker 2 (01:20:12):
Where you're from? England is so really great? You're burning scoop.
I don't think some night. First of all, terrible accent. Also,
that's not London, that's Australia. Is it might good? I
might yeah, that's Australian. But this is an accent young
(01:20:36):
terrible mommy.
Speaker 5 (01:20:38):
You're still couldn't battle? So what you gromed England? You great?
You're burning stoo. I don't stinktion night. Your swords to
pit down with you? No, no, man, I won't just
yelling broo.
Speaker 2 (01:20:50):
Oh my god. The bars are minted and bad at times,
but that voice is unbearable. And I think when people
heard that verse, that voice in the nineties, although niggas
did cartoony shit like that, that verse was so bad
(01:21:13):
that niggas ain't even pay attention to the song because,
like I said, coming up later on this song, Sauce Money,
jay Z Shahim, The Rugged Child, Big Daddy Kane and
Old Dirty bastard all who eventually became goats in their
own right. I mean, not Shahim, but Shahim, you know,
for his time, he was doing this thing. But ODB,
(01:21:35):
you're not skipping the o dB vers, You're not skipping
the jay Z verse, you're not skipping the Big Daddy
came verse. And Sauce Money was doing this thing at
the time. SOO yeah, those are all of our picks
for the worst verse of all time. That's my worst
vers of all time, Scoop on the show, improved song,
(01:21:55):
worse versa of all time. But anyway, guys, the cruise
not here. I'm all alone, and I'm gona go ahead
and get up out of here. It's gonna be a
short show show. It's actually really long if you guys
heard her from the beginning, So there will be some
pieces and clips with raw audio at the beginning. Just
bear with us. For those who are listening, there's a
(01:22:15):
lot of the show you're knocking in here unless you
are listening on YouTube. So I suggest you go on
YouTube because me and Cavil dropping some boss, So go
ahead and check it out. We're trying to get this
thing together. We're still running. You know running the old studio.
I do need to bring somebody in to help me
out with this engineering shit because it does become time
consuming just running the pod, editing audio, editing visuals, doing
(01:22:36):
stand up shows, and traveling, also running my social media
platforms TikTok, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter. I got a lot of
shit going on, and the first and foremost, I am
a full time daddy, so I got a lot of
shit going on being in the gym working out all
of that. So it'shit is time consuming. Blare black entrepreneur
(01:22:58):
shit over here. But anyway, he's got guys. This has
been episode two nineteen. It is in the books and
I will see you next week. Ray get better and
Calvi will be here next week with my full team
back in full effect for episode two twenty. But you
guys have a wonder night. Wonderful night, and once again,
rest in peace to my brother Clifford. Love you, bro,
(01:23:19):
May you fly well.