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August 22, 2025 • 18 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Aren't you ii ii ii all the time? Is that? What?

Speaker 2 (00:03):
There is a song about it? I thought it was
about the end of summer?

Speaker 1 (00:06):
Is how much every every song in rock and roll
is about drugs one way or another. Kidney you don't
have to get over it, move after it.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
Yesterday I was at the gym and then somebody we
were talking about old rock songs, and someone said, what's
that song about heroin? And I didn't know what they
were talking about, so I looked up a Wikipedia page
for songs about heroin?

Speaker 1 (00:24):
Uh huh, billy, It is a lot of songs, I'm
telling I mean, that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (00:28):
I mean songs you've heard on the radio dozens of
times that you didn't even know were about heroin, Like
Brown Sugar.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
Did you know? I always thought that was about Oh,
you don't even want to get started on that. That's
about a lot of things we'd best not discuss. Okay.

Speaker 2 (00:41):
I always thought that was a song about racism. It
turns out it can be boke. Yeah, you're probably right
about that. Yeah, but no, apparently the Brown Sugar wasn't
it was about heroin. It's like, huh, I thought it
was about a black Girl.

Speaker 1 (00:54):
Aren't some of the lyrics something about the slaver See
that's yeah, see that's what I thought. So what are they?
You a slave to the drug? Apparently? I know. It
blew my mind. It was like my whole life. I
was uncomfortable, and you got to peel the layers. Man,
there's like, oh, it's about slavery, it's about whoa wait, heroin?
Where did that come from?

Speaker 2 (01:14):
That song always made me uncomfortable, But it turned out
it was just for the wrong reason. Uh huh, I
don't It's not that you don't like racism, it's that
you don't like heroin.

Speaker 1 (01:22):
And drugs in general. Kids don't do drugs. I never
we're covered for, you know, for the rest of the week,
I think, unless it's five shots of espresso before I
go to work. Yeah, you gotta have that right. It's
not me, it's good morning. It must give me a
heart attack that it is not healthy. Bro, that was
a It was abrupt. Can you just kind of a
spike right between the eyes? Can you go down in

(01:42):
octave when you talk down?

Speaker 2 (01:44):
Where speak? Not in such a brace of high pitched manner?
When you first walk into the room.

Speaker 1 (01:49):
And screams, uh sod's good morning, mister Kenneth.

Speaker 2 (01:57):
Would you agree that since the kids go back to
school on Monday, today is the unofficial last day of summer,
is it?

Speaker 1 (02:02):
Oh no, it's Labor Day? Or what exactly are we know?

Speaker 2 (02:05):
It's got to be Labor Day, so then the first
week of school is still summer?

Speaker 1 (02:09):
Is that how we feel about that? And you know,
kids used to do you know, back in the olden
days when cracker barrel you know, was new, back when
it was for whitey. Yeah, kids used to wait until well,
the schools used to wait until after the Labor Day holiday.
That was when kids knew, this is our last big blowout.
It's it's the end of the summer, Labor Day and

(02:30):
then boom, then you'd go back to school. But oh no,
the schools had to move it forward, move it forward,
keep changing things around. Yeah. I guess it depends on
where you live in the country, too, isn't it?

Speaker 2 (02:41):
Because I feel like in the South, I feel like
they get out a little sooner and they go back
a little sooner than they do in the Midwest.

Speaker 1 (02:47):
But those are the only two places I ever lived.
It probably changed it after they got air conditioning for
the schools. You know, they might not have wanted you
to go back to after Labor Day when they didn't
have AC. Makes sense, But now school's you know, cooled off,
might be the place for sending your kids.

Speaker 2 (03:05):
Well, they just do what they do at the prisons,
you know, nothing, nothing. I don't feel bad about that.
By the way, I have.

Speaker 1 (03:12):
To ask, are you keeping up with the Joneses, Lil
nath A, Lil Nazac suly. I saw the video of
him yesterday. Well, this boy's he is not well Lil
nas X, I don't know if you know who he is,
how would you explain him to people? Like old, older people.

Speaker 2 (03:31):
He's a flamboyantly gay black rapper, which is interesting because
I'm so old I can remember when all the rap
songs were homophobic.

Speaker 1 (03:39):
Yeah, remember that good old ash.

Speaker 2 (03:40):
Back in the day, rap music was basically for dudes
to like have rap battles where they'd see who could
come up with the best gay jokes about their opponent.
And now they tell those jokes about themselves.

Speaker 1 (03:50):
I thought this old ball was a trying to pretend
to be a country singer. Okay, he's a rapper, you know,
you're correct.

Speaker 2 (03:56):
Your your confusion is understood because his first rap song
took elements from country music. It was called Old Town Road.
And they even at first when he first showed up
on the scene, they would feature him on Sesame Street
and kid shows and stuff like that because people thought
he was wholesome. They would even have him perform in
elementary schools. And as it turns out, that was a

(04:18):
song about doing scissor or something people didn't There's another
like brown Sugar that was lean o scissor, not scissor.

Speaker 1 (04:28):
Yeah. Correct.

Speaker 2 (04:29):
They would put the con syrup in a bottle filled
with sprite and a jolly rancher shake it up and
that purple drink. That's what that's a song about. Did
you know that?

Speaker 1 (04:37):
Well, now little mose X is in the hospital. Coffee
is still but they had to hospitalize him. Yesterday he
was walking down Ventura Boulevard and just as underwear and
also a pair of cowboy boots. Under underwear and boots and.

Speaker 2 (05:00):
It was tidy whities with it's not a good look
and they matched his cowboy I am pretty sure I'm
just gonna climb out on lie here and Gus he
was doing drugs at a gay orgy and he wandered off.

Speaker 1 (05:10):
That would be if you see the video, you'll say, well,
I don't think he was wandering down the street. He
was sasheting down the street.

Speaker 2 (05:17):
Yeah, it was like he was trying to put on
his stage mannerisms as he was. But there was nobody
there except for just someone that was driving by who
saw him. They took out their iPhone and he didn't
like it.

Speaker 1 (05:28):
But I'm gonna.

Speaker 2 (05:29):
Think mushrooms probably kind of put.

Speaker 1 (05:32):
On a show for them at one point. Besides his
sacheting in his undies, he also put an orange traffic
cone on his head and you know, kind of like
posed with that. Police showed up. It was a little early,
it was before six am, and when the police showed up,
little nas X naturally attacked them. I mean, what else

(05:54):
are you gonna do? So they arrested in battery of
a police officer. They took him to the hospital. Believe
it or not, they think drugs might have been involved.

Speaker 2 (06:04):
Had to be yeah, no, no, no, no, he's not
right now without.

Speaker 1 (06:10):
We're at you know where it's at. Go ahead, babe,
no no, no, no, no, no, no, no, go ahead. Babe. No, no, no, no, no,
that's him. Oh good, that's the keep him in jail
for a while of his meat. Hey for a coming

(06:34):
to the party.

Speaker 2 (06:36):
He keeps talking about the party.

Speaker 1 (06:38):
Yeah, the party. Where's the party? I got to go
to a party. Well, he came from somewhere, I'm gonna guess.
And again, I you know, I hate to repeat the
same creepy point, but I think he was doing drugs
at a gay orgy and he forgot where he was
and he strolled off.

Speaker 2 (06:51):
And who knows want his partner partners? Or did you
ever see that photo of Freddie Mercury in bed with
like ten dudes? Yes, so you know what I'm talking about,
a little sleepovers. All, here's the way the conversation gets
a little dark. I'm gonna guess Little naz X's life
is kind of like that. And don't they say that
more than fifty percent of gay black men will become
infected with HIV during their lifetime. What we witnessed yesterday

(07:14):
with Lil naz X strolling down the street, it was
funny on its surface, but underneath it there is something
dark and disturbing going on there.

Speaker 1 (07:23):
So how come they don't arrest a naked cowboy.

Speaker 2 (07:26):
I think they did. They did take oh the guitar guy. Yeah,
who do you think I was talking about? Well, little Nazax.

Speaker 1 (07:32):
So he's got a name, he's Little nask Sure, Yeah,
I don't know what the hill that all means. Naked cowboy.
It has a name. His name is naked Cowboy. That's
two completely different people.

Speaker 2 (07:42):
I won't bore you with a long winded explanation.

Speaker 1 (07:44):
Of a lip. He just parades around in his underwear
playing a guitar. And is it white privilege is that
they don't arrest him? Yeah, that's a great question. Lil
naz X, I think is the name itself is almost
kind of lazy. It's like he borrowed stuff from other rappers.
There's like a thousand Lils.

Speaker 2 (08:03):
And then nas was already a rapper, right, he was
kind of famous in the nineties, and oh I missed that.
And then he added X to it, and then there
you go, there's the x FO. Do you think like
Malcolm X or something? You know, it sounds edgy. He
doesn't know kwan Alax. It's almost like he gave himself
like an empowering black leader name and then he was.

Speaker 1 (08:24):
Like, nah, screw it, I'll be a gay cowboy. There
you go, and that's what he's doing. Bad, bad choice.

Speaker 2 (08:29):
I will tell you that what we saw yesterday was
probably also foreshadowing. I bet at some point there's gonna
be a news story about Lil nas X several months
from now overdosing, and then in a year he'll probably die.
I mean, look, I know it's Graham. I wish no harm.

Speaker 1 (08:42):
I know, but you strapolating out to the point where
it looks like curtains. It's curtains.

Speaker 2 (08:48):
I tell yeah, well, you're clearly seeing something bothers. We've
watched this before with celebrities behaving this way. He is
surrounded by an element of people that are very unhealthy
and you could see that right, and you can't live
for it like that? What are you reacting to on
the TV over there, Billy Ed.

Speaker 1 (09:03):
I just noticed that the FBI just rated John Bolton's
home moments ago. This is live breaking news from the
Fox News Channel.

Speaker 2 (09:14):
All right, does you don't remember who John Bolton was?
He was a neo con Republican. He was briefly in
the Trump administration. He was a turncoach. He's the guy
with the giant mustache. In fact, there are multiple Twitter
accounts called John Bolton's mustache.

Speaker 1 (09:28):
Yeah, it's like a walrus. And uh, this is Trump's FBI, right,
that's correct. Yeah, it's Cash Bettel's FBI more specifically, sure,
so this ain't like one of them Biden deals where
it's just some guy they don't like, a political adversary
who he's trying to take advantage of. FBI agents rted

(09:48):
the DC area home of President Trump's former national security
advisor John Bolton just a short time ago high profile
national security probe. Federal agents busted into his home in
Maryland at seven, so it had been about forty minutes
ago East Coast time. It is an investigation ordered by
FBI Director Cash Patel. Listen to this.

Speaker 2 (10:08):
No one is above the law at FBI agents on
a mission. A cryptic post on x made shortly after
the raid began, it sounds like they're saying it was
by Cash patateel uh huh yeah, Cash Pattel Dan.

Speaker 1 (10:19):
I don't know what they're hoping to find. They probably
rated it for a reason. Okay. As it turns out,
the probe, which is said to involve classified documents, was
first launched years ago. Oh not the classified documents again,
who know, everybody except Biden should not have classified documents.

Speaker 2 (10:34):
Yeah, this investigation was launched years ago, but the Biden
administration shut it down for political reasons. According to a
senior US official, Bolton has previously been accused of including
classified information in his twenty twenty book The Room Where
It Happened. He was working for the other side, He
certainly was. Yeah, and you know, so is Bill Barr.
For the record, but at least Bill Barr was honest

(10:55):
enough to come out this past week as much as
he hated Trump and admit he's seen the Stein files.
There's nothing in there that incriminates Trumper.

Speaker 1 (11:03):
Right, I think there were. You can put a name
in there and not mean anything happened, all right.

Speaker 2 (11:09):
So Trump is claiming that John Bolton broke a non
disclosure agreement with that book, and I don't even remember
what was in the book. I don't think most people
do it. One that interesting, but hey, you know, you
broke the rules. You know, all great lies are embedded
with tiny little grains of truth. So if that book
was dishonest, it might have used little elements of things

(11:29):
he wasn't supposed to say anyway in order to make
some dishonest arguments.

Speaker 1 (11:33):
H huh. And I don't know. I'm just speculating here,
because when I look at John Bolton and I see
that big mustache, it's very unsettling. Oh yeah, No, I
don't care for it.

Speaker 2 (11:40):
You know, it's scarce children when they see it. You
could go as John Bolton's mustache for Halloween if you want.

Speaker 1 (11:46):
Oh, I think that might be fun, especially now that
he's in the news. Maybe he'll still be in the
news by October. You know, if you think about it,
that's not that long away. AUGUSTA. That's a little next
next week. Mainly, you don't mean that's it for August. Boy,
that's gonna be weird this Halloween seeing all those little
kids running up and down the street dressed like John
Balton's mustache with some candy stuck in. Obviously, I've been

(12:08):
witch hunt since day one. I've been fighting acquisitions after acquisition.
So did I divide the city? Yes? No, the city
was designed before he was stepped foot into the off
Walton and Johnson radio network. Man, that's a snappy little
tunes right there. Can't you keep them coming? Brother? I'm coming.

Speaker 2 (12:28):
I've never really sat down and listened to Hamilton soundtrack.
As somebody that's spent years listening to hip hop and
alternative music and stuff like that, it never really occurred
to me this isn't very good, like.

Speaker 1 (12:38):
This is this is yeah, but you're not allowed to
say that. Remember it's the you know, the King's New Clothes,
that kind of thing.

Speaker 2 (12:46):
I know, you guys hate this about me, but I
know a lot about classic hip hop and this is
compared to the thing it's technically borrowing from.

Speaker 1 (12:53):
Hate it. We just don't get it. This is object
Do you know so much about classic hip hop? What's
the thing?

Speaker 2 (13:00):
Like everyone thinks it's good, but really it sucks the piano,
the pianist or like the what's the thing that you
know movies.

Speaker 1 (13:07):
Or or or songs or or I don't know, is
their way to Heaven? No, that's a great song, right,
it's a it's a DJ favorite because it's a long song.
That's the first thing you guys think about Boondock Saints.
Have you ever watched Boondock Saints twice? If you watch
it once, you might be tricked into believing it's a

(13:27):
good movie. But if you watch it a second time,
suddenly it occurs to you, this is garbage. It's just
a terrible film. I must have just sensed it because
I've never seen it. Look, what is it about? What?
What's a boondock? They were about these two.

Speaker 2 (13:40):
Brothers and they were on a revenge or Steve, do
you remember the movie The boon Dock Saints. It was
very famous back in the day, A turn of it,
but I don't remember it either. Anyway, the song was
it about dock workers? No? Or maybe I don't remember.
It's garbage. It was a long time ago. Nobody remembers then.
The song we were just playing. The Room Where It

(14:01):
Happens is a song from Hamilton, and John Bolton borrowed
from that.

Speaker 1 (14:06):
He wrote a book called The Room Yeah Actually, which
old old school hip hop's ways can actually Yeah, you're right, No,
you're right. That is he sampled from it. The most
dude that just got his house where he did.

Speaker 2 (14:21):
Trump's former nationalist security advisor, sampled from Hamilton for his
book title The Room Where It Happened And That's the
reason why his house was just rated. The book contains
information that was not supposed to be shared with the
public as part of an NDA.

Speaker 1 (14:36):
Anyways, that's it. You're in trouble.

Speaker 2 (14:38):
And he wrote a book. I think that was I
didn't read it because I don't know who did, nobody
we would talk to. I think the book was about
why Trump deserved to be impeached or something like that.

Speaker 1 (14:48):
I really believe. And somebody wrote an article about this,
probably a year or two ago before Kamala's new book
came out. Even I don't think people read most these books.
I think the people that write books that are politically
connected somehow they figure out a way to make deals
with the publisher that they'll write a book and they'll

(15:11):
pretend that it's selling, and then they'll go out on
a book tour and promote it, all the while realizing
they really didn't expect people to buy it or read it.
It's just a way to make contributions to political campaigns,
much like Hunter's art that you were talking about something

(15:33):
that sucked, but nobody wanted to say it. Did everybody
knew that was a campaign contribution. You didn't buy Hunter
Biden art for five hundred thousand dollars. You bought a
politician for that.

Speaker 2 (15:45):
Yeah, the thing you're talking about right now, buying a
book just for the There's a lot to be said
about that virtue signaling with literature, because we all know
a guy like this, he owns a lot of books.
Look I wanted, I'm sorry of one of these people.
I buy books all the time. I'll read the first
four chapters and then I'll go, ah, I get it.

Speaker 1 (16:02):
And yeah, get the cliff notes, skip to the end.
You know, whatever it takes.

Speaker 2 (16:07):
But there's people that do even less than that. It
happens all the time, right, It's like, boy, You've got
an awful lot of books about how Trump is hitler.

Speaker 1 (16:14):
What's this one about Trump's hitler? Yeah, well, you know,
never been you've never cracked it open. But what the hell?

Speaker 2 (16:21):
The room where it happened is a memoir, they say
by John Bolton. That's the former nationalist security advisor of Trump,
and his home was just rated because he published the book.
The book sparked controversy because a lot of people in
the Trump circle felt it was dishonest. It's critical portrayal
of Trump was not accurate. Democrats criticized Bolton for publishing
allegations in a two million dollars book deal instead of

(16:44):
testifying during Trump's impeachment hearings. So a lot of people
made the point, all right, so if it was so
terrible what you saw, why didn't you go talk to
Congress about it?

Speaker 1 (16:53):
Yeah? Well, why didn't you do that?

Speaker 2 (16:55):
Because he didn't actually care about justice or whether Trump
did any thing right or wrong wasn't important. He just
wanted to get millions of dollars for writing a book.
And it worked.

Speaker 1 (17:05):
If somebody went and I would say, Kenny, but I
understand you've got a trip to the desert plan that's
gonna get in the way of my plans for you.

Speaker 2 (17:15):
What's your plan for me? What was your idea? I mean,
I do go to the desert sometimes that's besides the point. Well,
don't don't do drugs, kids, I know we don't do drugs. No,
and we don't go to the desert for I think
we know what's out there. Nobody to wash you do drugs.
It's not true, billion not what's happening. No, my ideal was,
I don't know how long this would take. Get yourself

(17:35):
one of those little cameras that you wear. You can
get a little wearable camera like a go bro. If
a person wants to go door to door.

Speaker 1 (17:46):
Okay, you just pick a city, pick a neighborhood wherever
I Gotchat's let's start going door to door, knock on
the door and tell whoever answers the door. I will
give you ten thousand dollars if you can produce a
Kamala Harris book from your library, from your bookshelf. She's

(18:07):
ran a comple at this point. John Bolton's book, Hillary
Clinton's book, Kamala Harris. I don't know any of these
politicians who've written books recently, and they will tell you that, oh,
the demand for this was just over the top. The
publisher has already printed up, you know, the two hundred
and fifty thousand copies, and they just swept off the shelves.
New York Times is bragging them. Let's go to some

(18:31):
houses and knock on some doors and show me a book. Hilarious.
Nobody has spend your time getting all fixed up for
a party.

Speaker 2 (18:37):
Why go messing yourself up by getting drunk. Stay sober.

Speaker 1 (18:40):
It looks better on Stay tuned for more. Waltman Johnson
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