Episode 808

March 19, 2024

02:04:48

Reintroduction Of Reggy

Reintroduction Of Reggy
The No Nonsense Show - A Funny Experiment In Black Experience
Reintroduction Of Reggy

Mar 19 2024 | 02:04:48

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Show Notes

The No Nonsense Show Episode #808

In this episode, Jamie, B-Honest, and French Reggy discuss a range of topics including iPhone vs Android, FaceTime etiquette, and the evolution of sexual discipline. But most importantly, and in Supreme No Nonsense Fashion, we take the opportunity to reintroduce Reggy to his friend and guest on the show, Serge.

Highlights from the episode:

  • Jamie's struggle with using an iPhone and FaceTime
  • Ghetto chicks and how I love them
  • The importance of sexual discipline and the changing landscape of dating and relationships

Reintroduction Of Reggy #TNNS808

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Episode Transcript

[00:00:00] Speaker A: The views and opinions expressed by the no nonsense show and its hosts do not necessarily reflect views consistent with political correctness or the Rare Sonnets podcast network. So to get the show started right, we want to wish any officers of the sensitivity police a heartfelt. [00:00:13] Speaker B: We could just start off by welcoming Serge. What's up, Serge? [00:00:16] Speaker C: Hey, what's up, man? [00:00:16] Speaker A: What's going on? Gang, gang? [00:00:18] Speaker B: Because, again, I know that we all got the rundown, and I just know I'm a fuck it up from the beginning, like, already. Because before we get into anything, I think there's something we got to get into. [00:00:30] Speaker A: Okay? [00:00:32] Speaker B: Blue bubble. Gang, baby. What it. [00:00:33] Speaker A: Do you know what's so crazy about this? All this time, we've been arguing with this dude to get an iPhone. He finally gets one, and he messages me, and so I facetime him. Guess what he does? He doesn't answer. [00:00:47] Speaker B: Listen, hold up. There's a reason why I didn't have a shirt on, and I could not be, like, french reg with that. I was like, listen, there has to be protocol. [00:00:56] Speaker A: Yeah, I appreciate that. [00:00:57] Speaker B: In answering a face call, I mean, a Facetime call, you can't be naked from the top up. It doesn't matter what you got going on down below. [00:01:04] Speaker A: You've been gone for a minute. Let me show you a little sick Facetime me real quick. Let me show you a little trick. Okay. [00:01:08] Speaker B: All right. [00:01:08] Speaker A: Because you've been gone for a minute. Yeah. Because you started on iPhone. [00:01:11] Speaker B: Yeah, no, for sure. Since the inception of Apple employee, when. [00:01:15] Speaker A: They started, came out with iPhone, right? So you was like Ridge, like a plane seven pioneer type seven history right there. And then you disappeared Android for no reason. [00:01:26] Speaker B: Well, no, it wasn't no reason. I was working. I was a managing over at Verizon, and I needed to know the other side. I couldn't. [00:01:35] Speaker A: Get a windows Os device phone. [00:01:38] Speaker B: I couldn't talk to these people. [00:01:39] Speaker A: Where's your BlackBerry? [00:01:41] Speaker B: Stop. They didn't even have none of that at that time. You quit. [00:01:44] Speaker A: Why is it taking so long? [00:01:45] Speaker B: Because I'm just trying to figure out where. Listen, like, in my messages, okay? [00:01:50] Speaker A: If you go to my message, or you can just go to contact. [00:01:53] Speaker B: Oh, there you go. Listen, it's been a minute, bro. It's been a minute. [00:01:57] Speaker A: Okay, my nigga. [00:02:02] Speaker B: And honestly, this is the problem. Like, I've been having with. This is a problem with this device, is that I still haven't signed in to half the shit that I got, man. Like gmails, man. The gmails were the easiest ones, though. [00:02:16] Speaker A: Can we get to the part where you facetime me. [00:02:18] Speaker B: All right, here we go. I'm on it. Coming. [00:02:22] Speaker A: Okay, now watch this. So I go to answer, right? I can turn the camera off real quick like that. You see that? I can turn the camera on. I can turn the camera off. So when somebody's calling you, all you have to do is just hit that camera button before you know what I'm saying, and then I'll turn the camera off so that way you don't have to be ass naked talking to your homeboys. Okay, french Reggie knows this, but he just chooses to be ass naked or at least have ass naked talking to other guys because, you know, that's just. Okay. [00:02:49] Speaker B: He's comfortable. [00:02:50] Speaker A: He would die for that dude. [00:02:52] Speaker B: French Reggie's so comfortable in his heterosexuality that he'll be gay as fuck. You're listening to the no nonsense show. 10% less bullshit than any other podcast, guaranteed. Like, it doesn't matter. [00:03:20] Speaker A: Like, he. Well, what does that mean? So if you're so comfortable that you will allow yourself to do gay shit. [00:03:29] Speaker B: Come on, Bridge, don't do that because you can't agree with him on everything. First of all. [00:03:34] Speaker A: First of all, you know me. I said the only thing that's gay is when you start doing it with another dude. Everything else is not well. So if you facetime half ass naked with another dude, that's another dude that's playing shirts versus skins. That's nothing. That's like shirts versus skins. But y'all aren't playing ball. You're just chilling. Yeah. Okay. [00:03:50] Speaker B: You got a red light in the background? [00:03:52] Speaker A: No. That nigga was laying on his tummy with his feet up behind him in the air. [00:03:55] Speaker B: They can have Beyonce in the background on, like, stop. I cater to you. [00:04:00] Speaker A: What, man? You know, lay on his tummy on the bed and answer a Facetime call, and then get tired of his legs laying up, he puts him up in the air and crosses his ankles. Nigga just had his shirt off. That's it. [00:04:09] Speaker B: Listen. [00:04:09] Speaker A: And nigga nipples was glistening when I walked by. I was like, what the fuck? He just lotioned up the shower and lotioned up while he was still wet. [00:04:17] Speaker B: And then again, fridge. There's other things, too, right? Like the sperm tasting, right? That's simple. That's you, Dolo. It is not another dude. But I still feel like there's a level of gayness to that. [00:04:27] Speaker A: But you act like it was the masturbation split up and hit my lip. [00:04:32] Speaker B: It doesn't matter. [00:04:33] Speaker A: Dude's nut. Hit your nut. Are you a dude? But are you a dude? It's mine. Did a dude's nut hit your mouth? It's mine. Answer the question. [00:04:44] Speaker B: Answer the question. [00:04:44] Speaker A: Technically, first of all, Serge don't even know the story. He knows it now. [00:04:47] Speaker C: I know enough. [00:04:50] Speaker B: Long story short, see, Serge is like, I'm hetero enough to know I don't even want to go down that road. [00:04:55] Speaker A: Long story short, jacking off. Got too excited. [00:04:58] Speaker B: He's not too excited. That's what you try to do. [00:05:00] Speaker A: You laying down. Yeah. And then at that same moment, I had. The curiosity was like, well, girls are always swallowing. I want to know what this tastes like. You said no guy ever. Because I wanted to make sure, and then make sure what? That my diet was good. Okay. [00:05:19] Speaker C: Water. [00:05:21] Speaker A: Like a calorie log or something. [00:05:24] Speaker B: Go get a physical. Damn. There's so many other heterosexual ways to figure this out. [00:05:29] Speaker C: Was this recent or in the past? [00:05:31] Speaker A: It was in the past, right? Two years. Within two years. I told you all the story in two years ago. It was high school. [00:05:40] Speaker B: Okay, good answer. [00:05:41] Speaker C: Good answer. [00:05:41] Speaker A: Yeah, it was high school. I believe this is made up. [00:05:43] Speaker B: Right. [00:05:44] Speaker A: It didn't feel like high school. [00:05:46] Speaker B: I feel like that happened as an adult. [00:05:48] Speaker A: Yeah, I told you. [00:05:50] Speaker C: During COVID COVID, right. [00:05:53] Speaker B: Everything changed during COVID Everything changed in COVID. But high school, when you was drinking your pee, that's different. [00:05:59] Speaker A: I believe that that was me trying to be Pacquiao. I thought that wasn't even the first. But it wasn't the first time. French at the beach. You drank somebody else. I didn't drink nobody. They sprayed it on me because the jellyfish. [00:06:12] Speaker B: So he got r kellied at the beach, broad daylight. [00:06:17] Speaker A: Right? Yes. [00:06:18] Speaker B: And his mom let him have it. It was in front of everybody. Whole fam. [00:06:22] Speaker A: She didn't protect him. [00:06:24] Speaker B: He got stung by a jellyfish. It is funny because I know that Serge is your guest. [00:06:28] Speaker A: Right, right. [00:06:29] Speaker B: But it seems like he's going to learn a lot about. [00:06:35] Speaker A: We like to do that. Y'all niggas like to do that? Go ahead. [00:06:39] Speaker B: He gets stung by a jellyfish. The lifeguard rolls up with a ball of. Full of urine. [00:06:44] Speaker A: Yeah. [00:06:44] Speaker B: And it's like. [00:06:45] Speaker A: Shakes that shit up. [00:06:46] Speaker B: Like, listen, let me pour this on your son to make it right. You know what I mean? And mobs is like, good. [00:06:52] Speaker A: It'll fix the jelly. Freddie's like fish. [00:06:54] Speaker B: Listen, this shit stings. Let's go for it, right? [00:06:57] Speaker C: Where's the lifeguard at? [00:07:00] Speaker A: This is Baywatch. [00:07:03] Speaker B: And you know how lifeguard's got all kind of first responder equipment and shit. He got a squirt bottle full of. [00:07:09] Speaker A: Piss and a holster. [00:07:10] Speaker B: Don't know who pissed this is, right. It could be bum pissed. It don't matter if Fridge Reg and his mom both co signed, like, look, make it better. Yeah, and then he got squirted, right? [00:07:21] Speaker A: He didn't fix anything. [00:07:22] Speaker B: Well, he said it, French. Reg said it worked. We actually looked it up and found. [00:07:25] Speaker A: Out that it wasn't pissed. It was another thing. But that's what they told. They told me it was pissed. That is not what we looked up, French. [00:07:32] Speaker B: Why would they tell you it was pissed if it wasn't? [00:07:33] Speaker A: That was definitely piss. The problem was that piss doesn't work. Jellyfish things. [00:07:38] Speaker B: There we go. [00:07:39] Speaker A: There's no evidence that says you can pee on somebody when they get stung. It worked, though. Have you ever peed on a jellyfish to see if it dies? Try it. I haven't fucked with a jellyfish ever. [00:07:49] Speaker B: Since we myth busted that shit right on the air. [00:07:53] Speaker A: But that's the thing, though, people do that for jellyfish things. [00:07:56] Speaker B: What do you mean? [00:07:57] Speaker A: They evidence. But that's the thing people do. Do you put butter on a burn, too, right? Something your grandma told you. Do you get real quiet when it's raining outside? I kind of do that. Of course you do. [00:08:10] Speaker B: Turn the radio down when you go past the graveyard. [00:08:12] Speaker A: Because you believe for an address. Because you believe Luga. Ooh. Is waiting in the woods for you. That's why Lu gaou is real, bro. Yeah. Okay. Anyway, so meet french Reggie. Serge. Hey, friend. [00:08:24] Speaker B: Howdy. Yeah, I think if you listen to the show or you are introduced to the show, french reg. It's different than the french reg that you probably hung out with in college. [00:08:39] Speaker A: I would hope not, though. I would hope he'd bring the same French to the show. [00:08:42] Speaker C: More calm, cool, collected outside the pod. I'll give. [00:08:45] Speaker A: You're going to have to get a little closer. Sorry, bro. [00:08:46] Speaker C: My bad. He's more calm, cool, collected outside the pod. I'll give him that for sure. [00:08:49] Speaker A: Yeah. [00:08:49] Speaker B: Because you ain't never met Roxanne. [00:08:51] Speaker C: No, never that. [00:08:52] Speaker B: Thank you. Okay, so, yeah. [00:08:54] Speaker A: Do you know who that is? [00:08:55] Speaker B: No. [00:08:55] Speaker A: Okay. [00:08:55] Speaker C: Don't want to know. [00:08:56] Speaker B: You do. No. You kind of do. That's french Reggie's alter ego. [00:09:00] Speaker A: Yeah. When he's being a transsexual woman. Would it be. Would it be a transsexual woman? [00:09:04] Speaker B: Yeah, I'll say. [00:09:05] Speaker A: Because if you're a man, you turn to a woman, you're a transsexual woman, right? That's his transsexual woman character that he sometimes just comes out and say, it's not true, dog. It's a character. Wow. [00:09:15] Speaker B: Okay. [00:09:19] Speaker A: It's a character based off. Because when I was born, I'm supposed to be a twin. A fraternal twin. No, you weren't supposed to be a twin. You were a twin, you murderer. [00:09:29] Speaker B: Look, the statue of limitations is up. [00:09:31] Speaker A: I think you murdered your sister, bro. Like, stop it. Why are we pretending? There was some complications. She didn't make it gone, girl. And I say that I got 3% of her in me, and that 3% is black. Roxanne, where in you? What part of the in you? It's just in my whole aura. I think it's your anus. I think it's your anus, bro. It can't be nowhere else. [00:09:52] Speaker B: And I don't know how he is outside the podcast a lot, right? [00:09:54] Speaker A: Because. [00:10:00] Speaker B: I just say because he's a feminist, for sure. [00:10:04] Speaker A: Yes. [00:10:05] Speaker B: On the ride or die, he's pro woman to the death of him. [00:10:10] Speaker A: I wish you would call a woman a bitch. You know what I'm saying? [00:10:16] Speaker B: You're the reason why they don't act right. Men are the reason why everything wrong with women is because of us. He's that dude on the podcast, for sure. And it's changed a little bit over the last couple of years. He's been a little bit more rogue, I would say. But, yeah, for the most part, he's like, listen, women have the hardest. They are the toughest experience in all of humanity. [00:10:42] Speaker A: The most disrespected woman in the world. I think you said one time. [00:10:44] Speaker B: Yeah, black women, right? [00:10:49] Speaker A: They go through it, bro. [00:10:50] Speaker C: The magic intersectionality. [00:10:52] Speaker B: They have the magic, though. [00:10:54] Speaker A: Who do you think gets picked on more, kids with a handicap or black women? Well, kids with a hen. Because kids are foul. Exactly. At school, that kid would. So can we add that to, like, an honorable mention or something? You know what I'm saying? You save it for black women, for the head. What are you about to say? [00:11:12] Speaker B: I'm about to say special, but they call it spads. [00:11:16] Speaker A: Handicapped doesn't mean you're special, though. You could just special. [00:11:20] Speaker B: Why are you doing that, bro? [00:11:21] Speaker A: Here we go. [00:11:22] Speaker B: How are you not saving for. So you're not special, even though you handicap? [00:11:27] Speaker A: They get a whole parking spot. They get a stipend, my nigga. They ain't got to work. What do you mean, not special? [00:11:35] Speaker B: He like, yeah, ain't black. You ain't a black woman, though. Like, come on, man. [00:11:40] Speaker A: How dare you, as a handicapped man, talk about what a black woman shouldn't do and shouldn't do. It's like, what, bifida is funny? [00:11:52] Speaker B: Do you think that that nigga's not special? Come on. [00:11:56] Speaker A: When you say special, we mostly think of, like, autism. That's why. [00:11:59] Speaker B: No. [00:12:00] Speaker C: Who does down syndrome for me, honestly? [00:12:04] Speaker B: Oh, hey, though. So again, I got to ask you, since you brought it up, you fucking. You're not fucking. No chick with a down syndrome. [00:12:11] Speaker A: Is she bad? [00:12:12] Speaker B: No. Come on. So wait a minute. She want to give you the pussy. So what's wrong? So you don't like fucking handicapped people? [00:12:19] Speaker C: Yeah, he's, like, taking advantage. [00:12:22] Speaker A: You don't know about the emotional intelligence is not there emotionally intelligent. [00:12:26] Speaker B: Are you talking about. [00:12:27] Speaker A: We're not talking about somebody who's mentally retarded. How much people can understand. [00:12:32] Speaker B: How much emotional intelligence do you know to get a pussy up? [00:12:34] Speaker C: Well, this is a safe space. I'm more of a sapiosexual myself, so I got connection. [00:12:39] Speaker A: He makes love to someone's mind. [00:12:41] Speaker C: Yeah, like mind stimulation and having good. [00:12:43] Speaker A: Conversations, all that stuff. So he don't even need no pussy. [00:12:49] Speaker C: What I was trying to say is that, yes, you could be a baddie and you're attractive, but I can't have a conversation and see if you can connect. [00:12:55] Speaker A: So you're not going to fuck a bird? [00:12:56] Speaker B: What? [00:12:57] Speaker C: A bird? [00:12:57] Speaker A: Like a girl? That's like an Instagram. [00:13:01] Speaker B: I thought you meant, like a goose or something. [00:13:03] Speaker C: Good question. [00:13:04] Speaker B: I mean, I feel like I won't. [00:13:05] Speaker C: Put my all into it because I. [00:13:07] Speaker A: Know, like, yo, this nigga, look, he's come out. [00:13:11] Speaker B: You only go give her 70%, maybe 95. Okay. [00:13:17] Speaker A: That'S what I'm saying. 5%, no anal play. That matters. So you're not really sabiosexual because you just said. Because you're not going to be mentally stimulated. But she's beautiful. Now, I don't know if that makes him not be. I mean, if we're going to agree that sabiosexual is a thing, because I don't know if I do. If we agree that it's a thing, he can be that and then also. Okay, but I feel like all of. If that's the case, everybody wants French. Every time you have sex with your girl, you put your all into it. Not every time, exactly, but a good. I bet over 90, for sure. Bat. What? Over 90. You put your all in 90% of the time? Yeah, at least 90% of the time. I don't know if I believe that. [00:13:54] Speaker C: That'S a good ratio for someone below 30. [00:13:57] Speaker B: Again, it depends on how long you've been at it, too. [00:14:00] Speaker C: Factor. [00:14:01] Speaker B: Yeah. How long you all been together? [00:14:05] Speaker A: You don't have to answer the question because it gets well. Yeah, I think you got to keep the spark up. You got to. How you do that? French pegging. How you do it. One time you went to the trapeze, right? [00:14:15] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:14:16] Speaker A: What do you do? French pegging. No, I'm never going to do that. After you run out of shit, though, you got to keep it. I think we're going to be able to do a lot of things. [00:14:24] Speaker C: Definitely toys. At least. [00:14:28] Speaker B: That'S starter equipment. [00:14:32] Speaker A: We're going to have fun. Yeah. You all going to bring other women into the bedroom when the right time comes? [00:14:39] Speaker B: French. [00:14:39] Speaker C: Good answer. [00:14:40] Speaker B: See, this is a different French. [00:14:41] Speaker A: Right? [00:14:42] Speaker B: This is a different French. [00:14:43] Speaker A: I dance them every few months because my girl don't have a problem with that. That's what I'm saying. [00:14:47] Speaker B: I understand, but it isn't about her. No, you had a problem with. [00:14:50] Speaker A: No, my only problem we had with that is if she comes around and be like, well, since I let you fuck with girls, you got to let me fuck. [00:14:55] Speaker B: That's not what you said. [00:14:56] Speaker A: And I said, I don't want to deal with that. I don't want that to. For you to do that. It's not fair, man. That's what I was. That's exactly what I said. I didn't say. [00:15:04] Speaker B: It's not what you said. [00:15:05] Speaker A: What did I say? French is. Hold on. French. Hold on. You don't say anything else, bro. This is not fair to French. Every time he brings a guest, we spend the first hour bringing up all the crazy, introducing this nigga to friends. Didn't know. [00:15:23] Speaker B: Let me introduce you to this. [00:15:26] Speaker A: But what did I say? That's all I said. I said that was my argument. My argument was like, I don't want the three son if I have to allow her to sleep with another nigga, too. That was my only issue. You say that? Yeah, you say that because I'm stingy like that. [00:15:41] Speaker C: That's a hypocritical double standards exist. [00:15:42] Speaker A: I'm just going to say one phrase and then we can move on. Because Mac and I know soul tie. So what's that got to do with anything? Everything. I thought I was going to say to the phrase and let's move on. Yeah, but me saying sex is a soul tie doesn't mean that I can't have sex. [00:15:57] Speaker B: You wasn't bringing. [00:15:58] Speaker A: Why are you so mad? [00:15:58] Speaker B: Listen. [00:16:01] Speaker A: Because I said, sex is a soul tie. [00:16:04] Speaker C: That's true. [00:16:04] Speaker A: I still believe in. That doesn't mean. Fuck. [00:16:06] Speaker B: A lot of people were not willing to have the third chick in, regardless whether it was as a precursor to her having other dudes. You just were like, that's not my thing. I don't want to share, period. [00:16:20] Speaker A: Yeah, and I said that because I will keep that. I said, that's not my thing. I don't want to share. Because the moment I opened that door, I can't be a hypocrite and be like, well, you can't. But that was my stance. That was just what I was saying. Like, you can't. I mean, you can, but that was my stance. That was my stance. My stance was like, well, I don't want it that much. If I have to allow. If I can't be a hypocrite, pretty much. I'm sorry, French. I'm sorry. [00:16:42] Speaker B: What if she don't want it? What if she just wants other chicks? She don't want no other. [00:16:46] Speaker A: Cool, that's perfect. But at the same time, I got to understand that she's like, yo, what if, French, since we're going to say, talk about this, I tried to walk away. I want you to know I tried to walk back. What happens if G money wants to bring best of both worlds? No, because that's still another dick. But if you got titties, my thing is, no other dick can be in the room. You can't say no, because you don't know where best of both worlds phrase came from. I'll tell you where it came from. [00:17:21] Speaker B: Please do. [00:17:23] Speaker A: I was watching porn. [00:17:24] Speaker C: Okay. [00:17:25] Speaker A: All right. [00:17:26] Speaker C: Average Monday night. [00:17:27] Speaker A: Yeah. So this is the thing. When I started watching it, I thought it was two girls and a guy, right? [00:17:32] Speaker C: Well, it's a title saying, no. [00:17:37] Speaker B: You. [00:17:37] Speaker A: Always got me the title. I just do thumbnail. And then that's risky, right? [00:17:44] Speaker B: That's so risky. [00:17:46] Speaker A: So I'm watching it. It's two girls. I'm like, oh, this is good. And then the niggas here, I'm like, all right, cool. I'm thinking it's a threesome. And then I'm watching. [00:17:53] Speaker B: It is a threesome. [00:17:54] Speaker A: Oh, shit. It's another dick, right? And then I was like, oh, I'm already involved. [00:17:59] Speaker B: I'm invested. He's like, I'm pot to me. [00:18:01] Speaker A: Change. I just went to another scene, but. [00:18:04] Speaker C: I was saying, that scene or a different video? [00:18:06] Speaker A: Like, a different video. But what I did say is, after watching that clip, I was like, oh, transport is like the best of both worlds because you can. It's like. What's the first word in this phrase? [00:18:20] Speaker B: Look at Sarah's face. [00:18:21] Speaker A: What is the first word? Best. What does best mean? Is that an approving statement? Is that a positive statement? Or is that something that you would think of in a negative way if somebody's telling you, hey, man, I got the best of something positive, not just accepting, I'm cool. [00:18:40] Speaker B: You definitely open. [00:18:41] Speaker A: But this is what I'm saying. What I mean by best of both worlds, if you like both, you get both in that video. So what do you like? I like titties. And how did the best of both worlds for you? [00:18:52] Speaker B: How was that tranny's ass? [00:18:55] Speaker A: It was nice. I was satisfied before I knew before. [00:19:01] Speaker B: You get catfish. [00:19:02] Speaker C: You do see? [00:19:02] Speaker A: Damn, that girl bad. Or. You realize all I'm saying is. I'm not saying it's the best of both world for me, but I can honestly say if you like both, transport the best. Hey, French, how was the dick? What you mean? You say how the ass was? You had no problem saying how the ass was. Now, I asked you how the dick was. You like, what you talking about? I mean, you know, I subscribe to the idea that it has to. I didn't ask that. I said, how? Gotta live vicariously through the guy. I said, how was it? You performed well. So you live vicariously through a trans guy? No, the guy. That was the male. The male actor. Okay. Yeah, okay. I'm cool with that answer. You said the same shit, too, Mac. [00:19:37] Speaker B: I already know. [00:19:39] Speaker A: Mac agrees with Mac. Almost macked on a booty that wasn't a girl booty. [00:19:46] Speaker B: Again, I didn't know. [00:19:51] Speaker A: When. You don't know? [00:19:53] Speaker B: I started from the bottom and worked my way up, and a motherfucker had some lululemons on his shit. I was like, God damn. And then it was like, hey, goddamn, nigga. [00:20:00] Speaker C: Sharp. [00:20:02] Speaker A: You want to drink, bro? That's how sweaty you got him. You're not drinking? No, we can. Oh, there's not enough. I can go grab some more. [00:20:10] Speaker B: Yeah, let's grab some more. Yeah, because the gradic. What's that? Not at the Casamo caramel. Yeah, if you get a cup, I'll give you some of that, too. Okay. Man, I really do enjoy the fact that French Reggie brings people on, because, again, I think this is. It just gives natural content, because I think a lot of people don't know the french Reggie. That I know. [00:20:43] Speaker C: And that's why I love my podcasting. There's always, like, an alter ego to everyone involved. [00:20:47] Speaker B: Yeah. While the listeners and b went to go grab that, you guys were on a podcast, right? [00:20:53] Speaker A: Correct. Yeah. Okay. [00:20:54] Speaker B: So do you still podcast? [00:20:56] Speaker C: Fortunately, my podcast may picked up his ball and left. [00:20:58] Speaker B: Okay. [00:20:59] Speaker C: So I was a podcast for the past year or two. So I was like, you know what? Let me just be open minded to opportunity. I've been asking people, hey, you have a podcast here and there. People aren't serious. Me and Reggie be playing phone tag for a couple of months, and then our schedule was conflicting. Now, the schedule worked. I was like, okay, let's see what Reggie got to offer here. [00:21:16] Speaker B: Yeah, so far, so good. [00:21:19] Speaker C: Ten minutes in, he's getting cooked the whole time, man. [00:21:21] Speaker A: And you know what's funny is I remember when he went on you guys show and he came back here, and I watched the episode, and I was like, damn, french Reggie went on there and just bullied everybody. He wouldn't let nobody else talk, bro. [00:21:32] Speaker B: He was convicted. No, what it did is his podcast nuts have dropped. [00:21:36] Speaker A: Right. [00:21:37] Speaker B: So when he first started podcasting with us, they didn't know what French Reggie was. Again, they were like, why is he so. Who is that soft spoken? [00:21:46] Speaker A: Yeah, we've been partying for, like, what, ten years for me. It's ten years for the show, right? [00:21:54] Speaker B: Yeah. Has it been seven years, Reg? [00:21:57] Speaker A: Yeah. [00:21:58] Speaker B: Gosh. [00:21:58] Speaker A: We say grow up. [00:22:00] Speaker B: Yeah, no, I mean, because again, throughout. [00:22:05] Speaker A: COVID, all of that. [00:22:07] Speaker B: Yeah. So, yeah, no, I see it now, but, yeah, when he first started, he used to talk like this, and they'd be like, what's wrong with that? Speak up. And then he took that and was like, listen, you all want to hear me talk? [00:22:20] Speaker A: And now yells whenever he gets. [00:22:21] Speaker B: He pops fucking speakers and shit now. Like, he blows my fucking eardrums. [00:22:24] Speaker C: Best of both worlds. [00:22:27] Speaker A: That's his second mic he's on. [00:22:30] Speaker B: Best of both worlds. He came on with the knowledge of world dick sizes. Right? Like, he got a calendar. [00:22:39] Speaker A: Sorry. Nigeria. It's not looking good for you guys up there. [00:22:45] Speaker B: Hold up. [00:22:45] Speaker A: No, I don't think you're top five. Oh, are they? [00:22:53] Speaker B: Number one is what, though? Congo is number one. [00:22:57] Speaker C: They got it. [00:22:57] Speaker A: Haiti's still top five, too, though. You know what I'm saying? Yeah, I don't know. [00:23:01] Speaker C: Where'd Jamaica at? [00:23:02] Speaker A: Jamaica is, like, in the top ten. We got to get our data. [00:23:04] Speaker B: Where's America at? Okay, African American. Can we get. Just. They don't do it like that, so we got everything. It's a Milton pot. [00:23:14] Speaker A: That's the problem, yeah. [00:23:15] Speaker C: That is facts are skewed for America. [00:23:17] Speaker B: An asian American is going to bring us down. [00:23:19] Speaker A: Yeah, that's what happened. That's exactly what happened. That's literally what happened. Yeah, that's cool. So what I actually wanted to talk about was crazy because it's so out of my character, I think. Mac, you came here a few weeks ago talking about some months. [00:23:36] Speaker B: No, because again, what it was, I watched that fucking. What was it? The football thing. Hard knocks, right? [00:23:42] Speaker A: And they were at a practice and. [00:23:44] Speaker B: They was doing a play. [00:23:45] Speaker A: But that's weird. Those men skiing. [00:23:47] Speaker C: I'm a Gen z grown man though. These are gen zers. [00:23:50] Speaker B: But everybody was hyped and when the music cut off, they lost their shit. Like, hey yo, turn that shit back off ski yee. And I was like, it is catchy. But the more I listen to anything else that she's done. Trash. [00:24:03] Speaker A: Latest song, she. That's what I'm about to talk about. That new song, it's gone. It is gone as a hit. So you saying you like that new song? Out of here, my nigga. You can't not like it. It's a good song. I'm surprised your ass like it. I love ghetto bitches. I didn't know it. I do. Ghetto love is real love. Ghetto bitches. The problem is I don't like the fake ghetto meg thee stallion. I don't like the fake. She's not ghetto. I respect as a meg fan, she's. [00:24:29] Speaker C: Not ghetto, she's more suburban girl. [00:24:32] Speaker A: I like the real ghetto. Like an open face gold tooth that's from the 80s, you know what I'm saying? I like a real ghetto. [00:24:39] Speaker B: What was that one bitch from the Bronx that you put us on? [00:24:41] Speaker A: That scarlet. Scarlet. I like that shit too. I recognize that. I really like authentic ghetto bitch. [00:24:48] Speaker C: Like Marilla. [00:24:49] Speaker A: Yeah, I like that. I like that too. I didn't like this shit until I realized. Wait a minute, wait a minute. What am I doing? Isn't it the beat though? I feel like it's all beat. [00:25:00] Speaker B: What is this? [00:25:01] Speaker A: Let me see if I can pull. I know this is going to fuck up copyright, but I know that. [00:25:06] Speaker B: What's the name? I got a song. What's happening? That only sound like with fucking Cardi B and like two other bitches. [00:25:16] Speaker C: See, Cardi B is never going to lose me. [00:25:18] Speaker B: No, I think the hook is what's happening. Right? I'm horrible with song titles because I don't ever look at it as I'm listening to it. So you could say, oh, that's this, that. And I'm like, I wouldn't know what the fuck it was until you play it. And I'd be like, oh, yeah, I do know that. Because I don't look at the titles while I'm listening to shit. But, yeah, it's her and like, two other bitches where she said, I give rap this pussy or put a ribbon on my shit. You know what I mean? [00:25:44] Speaker A: I don't even know what that is. Yeah, that don't sound ghetto like this, though. [00:25:50] Speaker C: That song was a hit. [00:25:52] Speaker B: I knew it was a hit because. [00:25:53] Speaker C: The white people in my neighborhood were playing it. Leaving for work in the morning. [00:25:56] Speaker A: The white moms. [00:25:58] Speaker B: Yeah, white moms and dads. Go get it. [00:26:00] Speaker C: Swiss and Sandy Springs. [00:26:05] Speaker A: Oh, just the beginning. [00:26:06] Speaker C: Gas station twerking trip, BP show. [00:26:14] Speaker A: It's that slam thick cuomo skin five bitches bills pay catch me sliding in a band. I ain't looking for no man, I. [00:26:23] Speaker B: Recruit no friends will we beg, fill with bands? [00:26:28] Speaker A: Yeah, that be hard. Take me cat miss I want to get some speakers just for this song. He want to keep me all over my tape. I'm so fucking sexy, they attack. You can't even hate the whole summer. How the hell take Heath gave her that? [00:27:00] Speaker C: She has a whole vote of hits with Tay Keith. [00:27:02] Speaker A: And that's new. That song is like a couple days old. Yeah, and it's already number one. [00:27:06] Speaker C: Yeah, it's already smashed post pregnancy. [00:27:09] Speaker B: So that was my thing again. I couldn't fuck with the twerking pregnant bitch again. [00:27:16] Speaker A: I don't give a fuck. She's not even sexy, my nigga. But I'm willing to call her sexy. Red. Get them sexy. [00:27:22] Speaker C: She's hood fine, as they say. [00:27:24] Speaker A: I had to readjust my sensibilities this weekend when I recognized. You know what? I've been liking this song for a few days. I need just going to admit it to the world. [00:27:32] Speaker B: So I still feel like when I listen to a female rap, my favorite out of all these motherfucking bitches out right now is still Nikki. [00:27:40] Speaker A: I don't give a fuck. [00:27:41] Speaker C: That's fair. [00:27:42] Speaker A: Yeah, I can't do it. Women can't rap. Women can't rap. And so when they try to pretend like they're really rappers, I'm like, nah, I'm good. [00:27:52] Speaker B: What's that one with the fucking. The one where she talk about the new year, fucking new Lambardi, fucking whatever that shit is. [00:27:59] Speaker A: But she got too many, bro. [00:28:01] Speaker B: No, it's the most recent one where they playing it on a commercial and shit. And it's fucking like, I don't like. [00:28:05] Speaker A: Bitches that pretend they're british. [00:28:07] Speaker C: Like, fuck the club up. [00:28:08] Speaker B: Fuck the club up. Nah, it's like Bobby Nikki had hella cat. [00:28:20] Speaker A: I want a bitch to say some shit about her pussy being brown. And I mean, I didn't think I would be into that. [00:28:27] Speaker B: I like ghetto bitch. [00:28:27] Speaker A: I mean, there's always room for ratchetness. There's room for that. There's always room for ratchetness. Yeah. [00:28:34] Speaker C: Authentic ratchet though. [00:28:35] Speaker A: Yes. So do you like lato then? Yeah, she's good. Lala got a good voice. [00:28:39] Speaker C: Clayko? [00:28:40] Speaker A: Yeah, she got a good voice. I'm not sure that she's all the way ghetto. Like she's pretending to be. I knew her as a kid because my daughter's an artist and they were in the same circles a lot. In fact, one of the girls that was in my daughter's group used to date lotto. So you're back when she was Miss Mulatto, which is a weird name, but she's from Clayton county, which is super ghetto. But not all of it. And everybody there ain't ghetto. I'm just saying I feel like there's a little bit of affectation when she speaks. Some of her country draw is not necessarily how it started. But there's no way sexy red was ever like, oh, thank you know, thank you teacher. She was never that. [00:29:15] Speaker C: Yeah, no, she's pure St. Louis. [00:29:18] Speaker A: She said curbing instead of Cuban. [00:29:20] Speaker B: Everybody. What is that, man? That shit fucking is disco. What is that? Listen, bro, I don't know, but it fucking goes every year. Get a new Limbardi. That shit is fucking smacking. [00:29:33] Speaker C: It's going to bang H and M though. [00:29:36] Speaker B: That shit is smacking some commercials for sure. You know what it is too. When I be on the road, I've been looking for high energy shit to listen to. I can't fucking be too low key. And that shit fucking is energy for days. But yeah, I don't know, man. Sexy red. I think there's a certain level of ratchetness that I think if you digress below. [00:30:03] Speaker C: It'S like once you take off your brain and say, you know what, I'm not going to use my brain to analyze the lyrics. Let me just hear what her vibe is and the beat. Like he just said right now, he realized, wait, I like ghetto bitches now. [00:30:14] Speaker A: But no, I've always liked them. I just pretended. I think. [00:30:19] Speaker B: Real talk, we said crazy. [00:30:22] Speaker A: Pussy is the best pussy. No, you. I don't agree with crazy pussy. Because there's repercussions to crazy pussy. Down the road, it ain't that good. [00:30:37] Speaker B: Immediately. Down the road, it ain't that good. [00:30:39] Speaker C: Popping tires. [00:30:41] Speaker B: So, again, it's funny because we was talking about porn earlier, right? And I remember thinking, like, who do I like as far as a female porn star? Who is my jam? And really, it's that chick, Gianna Michaels. But it's not just the titties, it's the way she go hard, right? It's like she can't get enough of the dick. Like, her energy on dick is like. [00:31:07] Speaker A: Yeah, Gianna Michaels, go hard. [00:31:09] Speaker B: It's like top five, right? I fuck with that. Your energy on the dick. [00:31:14] Speaker A: You could tell she loved the job, right? It's a white. Hell, yeah. [00:31:22] Speaker B: Okay. [00:31:22] Speaker C: Her highlight tape, her huddle tape, hall of fame. [00:31:26] Speaker B: Okay. Just like you didn't know. You like ratchet, bitches. Go ahead and check out. [00:31:30] Speaker A: Go ahead and. [00:31:30] Speaker B: Go ahead and check her out. [00:31:31] Speaker A: Damn. I didn't know I like white, right? I expect that from you. But my nigerian and haitian brothers, I don't expect. Jada fire is my number one. But Gianna, I understand when you say. [00:31:45] Speaker C: Gianna might have pinky up there. [00:31:46] Speaker B: Oh, yeah, Pinky. No, old school pinky. Og original. Before she got, like. I remember my nigga put me on Pinky, like, when she was first on the scene, and I was like, yo. [00:31:55] Speaker C: And then she got crazy. [00:31:56] Speaker A: And then this bitch doing fart videos. Yeah, I thought she was just big. She calling herself stinky now. [00:32:05] Speaker B: She can't even walk right. It got really ridiculous. [00:32:11] Speaker A: Instead of Pinky, she put the video up. She got fat. I feel like they can take care of that. [00:32:20] Speaker B: Porn stars, when you get that money, it's like that d boy belly, bro, you don't hear my tummy. I guess. My money, like, she eats. You can afford all of the shit that you ain't never had before, right? And she was able to just splurge in alcohol, and it took a hold of her thighs and her hips and everything else. [00:32:39] Speaker A: She liked. When they pumped her with a bike pump, though, bro. [00:32:41] Speaker B: It got wild. But she used to be a chief with the motherfucking strap on, too. Like, she put it on. Other mean. Pinky was a star when she first came out. Let's be clear. [00:32:51] Speaker A: I feel like that era of porn is probably the best era of porn. You don't even know what era that is. What era is that? 90s? [00:32:57] Speaker C: No, early 2000s. [00:32:58] Speaker B: Yeah, that's what I'm saying. That's early 2000. [00:33:01] Speaker C: Anything Latrell spree rail type game. [00:33:05] Speaker A: Going to stay on. New York. [00:33:07] Speaker C: New York. [00:33:10] Speaker B: Yeah, that's what's up, though. Yeah. So what was you saying, though, B? [00:33:15] Speaker A: I'm sorry about six rent. Yeah, I'm done. I just like tripping because that song is out of here and I'm totally against horrible rap. [00:33:23] Speaker C: I feel like Cardi B, then. [00:33:25] Speaker A: Nah, she's definitely ghetto, but she's not my kind of ghetto. She had New York shit. Oh, I'm a down south. I need you to say curbin when you say in Cuban. I need to say her. You know what I'm saying? I need that. That's what I need in my life. I feel you. [00:33:38] Speaker C: So you're anti city girls, then? [00:33:40] Speaker B: Oh, fuck yeah. [00:33:43] Speaker A: City girls? What, Miami? Yeah. And JT let me know. I never really. I think they're like ghetto escorts chicks. They're like ghetto chicks that find the money. Really? There's something about city girl that, like. I don't know, but their music. [00:33:57] Speaker C: Do you like their music? [00:33:59] Speaker A: I think sirs keep me back off the road. I don't know if I like ghetto bitches. Yeah, I don't know. City girls just made you think. I think going further down south, maybe it's just Miami is too far south, you know what I'm saying? I need some Georgia, Tennessee. What's so funny about Chicago, Detroit, St. Louis, those areas is that all those Ohio people, their grandparents or their parents are from Georgia and Alabama and all that. So a lot of the way that they speak is a callback to the way that we speak. You know what I'm saying? So, like, when she's saying curbing, it's a lot of Atlanta people say curbing or pencil instead of pencil point. [00:34:35] Speaker B: I'm glad you translated because I didn't know what the fuck I didn't know what. [00:34:42] Speaker A: Of a lot of. A lot of us, we don't say the last syllable of the word, especially consonants. Yeah, you're right about saying so, Mac, you know how we were just talking about porn and I was telling, you know, I'm going to just tell myself not to watch porn. [00:34:56] Speaker B: So how's that going? [00:34:57] Speaker A: It's going pretty good, actually. [00:34:58] Speaker B: What does that mean? How's it going? So you did? [00:35:01] Speaker A: No, I'm a couple of weeks in now. [00:35:03] Speaker B: I feel like you should know. Exactly. I feel like. You round? [00:35:06] Speaker A: Yeah, like when you're an alcoholic, you'd be like, three weeks. I think it's three weeks. Ten days. I got my ten day chip. [00:35:12] Speaker B: You're like three years two months and 15 days. [00:35:15] Speaker A: I'm three weeks. You're like, hey, I'm french, Reggie. I jack off too much. Hi, French. Well, first of all, it wasn't because I was jacking off too much. [00:35:23] Speaker B: What was it, then? [00:35:23] Speaker A: It was because on Twitter, right? How young niggas on Twitter are so horny facts. Yeah. And I was, like, stuck by the. You're basing your jack off and not Jack, so it was never about me. Jack. Your go no go is based on a dude. No jacking off too much. It was never about me needing to jack off or need to not jack off. I just use porn as, like, I was telling Jamie Mack, when you choose something to stay away from anything, discipline. Whether it was your diet, porn, whatever. You choose something, it helps rewire your brain to get to whatever goal. It's like a discipline thing. It was a discipline training I was doing. It was nothing about, like, I have a problem with porn. But what made me choose? [00:36:02] Speaker B: But he didn't want to quit coffee. I couldn't quit coffee. [00:36:05] Speaker A: That's why I do something I could do first, like quitting porn. I know I could quit porn first once I do that, you know what I'm saying? [00:36:11] Speaker B: Work your way up to coffee. [00:36:12] Speaker A: So, if you were on an island and you could choose coffee or porn. You're picking coffee. [00:36:17] Speaker B: Yes. They could drop you off an espresso. [00:36:26] Speaker A: No weed. I've done the no porn. No problem. But the coffee. I've always find a way to at least get a Coke. If I didn't do no coffee, I find some shit else. Something with caffeine, so I can't. Soda right there. Yeah. You see what I'm saying? I always find an outlet for the coffee, so I can't say. That's why I say porn is easier. You got to pour my man a shot. [00:36:43] Speaker B: It's already poured. What you talking about? [00:36:45] Speaker A: No, I don't drink. Okay. I rarely drink. [00:36:48] Speaker B: Yeah. Not special occasions. [00:36:49] Speaker A: Special occasions only. [00:36:53] Speaker B: Cheers. [00:36:54] Speaker A: What is this to? What are y'all cheering to? [00:36:55] Speaker B: To french Reggie's celibacy. [00:36:58] Speaker A: Here we go. [00:37:06] Speaker B: I feel like Sergey got the good shit. [00:37:07] Speaker A: That coromino is fucking great. [00:37:09] Speaker B: Yeah, he got the good shit. [00:37:10] Speaker A: It's like not drinking liquor. [00:37:11] Speaker B: Yeah, it very. [00:37:11] Speaker C: Was smooth and sweet, actually. [00:37:12] Speaker A: That's a nice tequila. That's Kevin Hart shit. [00:37:15] Speaker B: They know you had it on tequila. That shit is crazy. [00:37:19] Speaker A: But pretty much, I just decided to choose point. [00:37:21] Speaker B: But you listen to a. Because he's a plant. Of course they gave him that. [00:37:27] Speaker A: That's part of isn't agave a plant. [00:37:30] Speaker B: That's part of his plant package. [00:37:31] Speaker A: That's the double. [00:37:32] Speaker C: The machine incentives. [00:37:35] Speaker A: But pretty much on Twitter, I've seen young niggas, like, too horny. And I'm like, I was a young nigga and I was never that. [00:37:41] Speaker B: What do you mean? Okay, so what do you mean you saw niggas on Twitter, too horny? What does that mean? [00:37:45] Speaker A: Like, niggas just a girl posts a regular picture, and they go underneath and put that dick pic. You know what I'm saying? You look the guy's dicks. It's on the timeline, bro. It's not like I'm looking for. [00:37:55] Speaker B: It's different Twitter. [00:37:56] Speaker A: I've never seen that Twitter. That's what I'm saying. Like what? That's what I'm saying. But that's what I'm trying to tell you. And I'm like, what is going on? I was like, why these niggas are so horny? And then girls also post their DMs and shit. And niggas don't say, hey, how you doing? They be like, they either give them some money and ask for whatever it's caused, or they go straight to it. Well, first, let me ask you a question. Yeah. Okay. So you're looking at somebody's post, and then two replies down, there's a dick, right? What do you think is going through the mind of the person who posts that dick? He's horny as fuck. No. Why would they put a public picture of their dick on Twitter? I still don't know the answer to that. But do you think that they're doing it because it's given them some success in the past or because they've been bombing, failing every time? [00:38:40] Speaker B: Free advertising. Right. [00:38:41] Speaker A: I'm sure they probably had found some success in the past. What's the problem with this? But again, I'm just going by, when I was a young nigga, I was not that confident to do all that shit. So that's a personal. That's not like. Let me finish. [00:38:53] Speaker B: Would you say Haiti ranked top five? [00:38:59] Speaker A: But I went back to thinking about my time when I was young, when Instagram first started, and I was like, I remember the work I had to do to get a girl to send me a picture. He was too scared to show your date? No, I'm just saying, no, back then, you had to work to just get that picture. And now you can see Bernice Burgos and the girl from high school. So it's like, these young niggas got it all. I remember there was a time where you just fingered the girl. And I was like, we had a good day. I fingered niggas straight, eating ass first time. You know what I'm saying? [00:39:27] Speaker B: Stop it. Stop it. [00:39:28] Speaker A: He only takes two more times. [00:39:30] Speaker B: Stop. You act like one is so far away from three. [00:39:36] Speaker A: This nigga got a Steve Harvey book quote on how many times it is before he eats. [00:39:40] Speaker B: Listen. And I just can't let this shit slide. I'm sorry. Go ahead. Because fridge. Reggie's fucking rule is that he won't eat ass before the third, not just asshole. [00:39:51] Speaker A: Just call it what it is. The third fuck. And what I mean by the third. [00:39:55] Speaker B: Fuck, you could fuck three times in one night, and he's on the ass. [00:39:58] Speaker A: So. No, that's not what I'm saying. [00:39:59] Speaker C: Three different occasions. [00:40:01] Speaker A: Yeah, and that's the reason why you could do it the third time. Because maybe the first time you did fuck her three times. Second time, you probably fuck her twice. So by the third time, you already fucked. Hypothetical. Hypothetical. Let's say the first time, your dick couldn't get hard, because every time she got close, your dick got soft. And every time she moved away, it got hard. [00:40:18] Speaker B: Listen, that was 14 year old Reggie. [00:40:22] Speaker A: Every time she get near you. Hold on, sir. [00:40:26] Speaker B: Listen, sir. [00:40:29] Speaker A: Y'all niggas are fucking up the topics. [00:40:32] Speaker C: Is this my friend still? [00:40:33] Speaker B: I don't know. Yes, it is. [00:40:34] Speaker A: Because. [00:40:37] Speaker B: He'S dropping Easter eggs on niggas. [00:40:39] Speaker A: I wasn't going to say nothing. We know backstory. You called it out. That didn't have to be a true story. [00:40:44] Speaker B: I said hypothetical Easter is right around the corner. And he dropped Easter eggs already, like the bunny. So, French Reg had a problem back in the day. This is an early french reg. [00:40:56] Speaker A: Right? Let's call it a condition. It wasn't even a condition. It was nervous nigga. [00:41:03] Speaker B: Whenever this nigga would bring his dick towards the pussy, it would go. And then he'd take it away, and it's like, hey. And then you take it back, and it's like. And I thought maybe that meant you was gay. Maybe you don't really like pussy. [00:41:16] Speaker A: Right? [00:41:16] Speaker B: Like, maybe your dick is telling you something. [00:41:17] Speaker A: Telling you something. All the signs are going off, bro. [00:41:20] Speaker B: This right here. Not the mama, right? But he said his anxiety, it ain't happened since then. He's able to mind fuck his dick into liking pussy since then. [00:41:34] Speaker A: You did say you could trick yourself now. So my question then is, let's say it's a situation like that where y'all technically didn't actually copulate is that the word? But you know what I'm saying? You count that you all were naked. You all were together. No, I don't really count. The next time, though, you were able to get at least a semi hardy, and you put it in and it was like bending up, but at least it was getting in there. So you did penetrate, but you weren't able to come because you couldn't get fully hard. A damn gummy. So then the next time you see her. No. Okay. You have to nut the whole point of the third fuck is because you went multiple rounds. First time you met her. Second time you fucked her. So by the third time, you kind of like, we've been fucking. No condom, right? Just whatever. It depends. You know, me, I don't want. No kidding, right? [00:42:18] Speaker B: No, I'm here. I'm listening. [00:42:19] Speaker A: You know, for me, she got to be on the pill. I don't take those risks if she's not on the pill. Pill? [00:42:23] Speaker B: What risk? There's still risk. [00:42:25] Speaker A: Risks, are there my AIDS? [00:42:27] Speaker B: See, he's over there with that. What's that pill we just talked about last for a reason, like Zafidil or whatever that shit is that reduces it to non HIV, to fucking non detectable. He's on that tip, like, hey, as long as you don't give me a baby, we're good. [00:42:43] Speaker A: You can have hidden age. I tell you my biggest. You can have peekaboo aids. My biggest fear was pregnancy before STD. Because I don't think I'm fucking girls with STDs. [00:42:54] Speaker B: No one ever does. Yeah, that's why you take the condom off. True. If you think that she has STD. [00:43:00] Speaker A: Nobody'S fucking burning pussy, right? [00:43:02] Speaker B: Like, you don't think it's fucking contaminated. That's why you didn't wear the condom. [00:43:07] Speaker A: But back to what I was saying. I was just saying nowadays young kids are. The access is so much that their porn addiction is too much. [00:43:16] Speaker C: I will say back in the day, growing up, if you want to be horny on Twitter, you have to wait till, like, midnight will come out. [00:43:22] Speaker A: Nowadays, back in the day, we had phases. We had first base, second base. These niggas don't got bases no more, right? Get off my yard. These niggas go straight to it. So I'm, like, saying that evolution is needed. I think it's important. [00:43:34] Speaker B: But is that a thing of, like, listen, why waste that time, right? Like, you know what I mean? Running the bases when I could just either find out whether this is going to be a home run or not. Let's quit fucking around. Is that more efficient or is it a problem? Because it sounds like to you it's a problem. [00:43:53] Speaker A: And I think French wasn't really part, even though he was part of it. It was so early. I don't think he was part of the kicking game era. Right, where you had to cold call bitches. [00:44:02] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:44:02] Speaker A: You know what I'm saying? There's no interest. Like, you're at the mall and you know how you do a cold call for a sales call where you're calling them and they didn't know you were going to call. And you have to put your whole pitch in that call. Are you a try to get them to bite? That was niggas throwing game back. There was a cold call and it was all the time, so you had to be charged, ready, whatever. Now, though, it's like window shopping. So why would you put so much effort into. They just put your dick up and if she wants it, she's going to get you back. If not, you sound like to stay off my yard. [00:44:28] Speaker B: He does, but he's not even 30 yet. But this is like, he's already like. [00:44:32] Speaker A: Young bucks just putting her dicks everywhere. These niggas now are the soft core porn, from Instagram to the hardcore porn on Twitter, all that shit. They don't have, like, sexual discipline to the point where I want to play this video, okay. This is a son and his mom. Okay. You want to send it to me so I can put it through the system? Oh, yeah. Let me just send it. [00:44:52] Speaker C: I. I think know the video you're. [00:44:52] Speaker B: Talking about son and his mom. [00:44:55] Speaker C: Yeah, Sigmund Freud, shit wild. [00:44:58] Speaker A: Okay, that's Oedipus before Sigmund Freud. [00:45:01] Speaker B: Yeah. I'm interested to see. [00:45:08] Speaker A: What I'm saying is pretty much now. Because at least for us, like you said, you had to go find the videos when you was younger and then watch it. Right, right. Me, same kind of thing. Or I had to find the website, like, now these niggas don't have. [00:45:19] Speaker B: We had video stores we had to go to. Nigga in the back room, there was. [00:45:23] Speaker A: A back eleven year old could just type in Brianca and Bianca, whatever girl named Bianca might have a nude out. So that's what I'm saying now. There's no passage. There's no rite of passage. Now, these niggas have no sexual discipline to the point where now. But it's funny. How do you want to play this? First you want me to call them out? [00:45:45] Speaker B: Please call them out. I don't want to wait, call me out. [00:45:50] Speaker A: Because it's funny how you're getting on. The niggas about throwing a dicks out because they're like, why would you all do this? But it's the bitches. They the ones that's putting these thirst traps out. They putting up titties at 09:00 a.m. If she got titties up, why can't I put my dick up? Man? [00:46:03] Speaker B: They got a whole titty Tuesday, nigga. That caving for women again. [00:46:07] Speaker A: These innocent women, they're just showing inside their vagina walls. What's the big deal? [00:46:12] Speaker B: Why would a nigga flash his dick? [00:46:13] Speaker A: Be both parties don't treat me like a ho because I'm showing my inside of my vagina. That's what I'm saying. That's what I'm saying. No, I'm with you. Both parties are to blame. That's why I said back then the work I had to do for a girl to send me a bikini picture. Now they just post whatever. What happened to that respect you had for yourself? Oh, wow. They don't have that. [00:46:31] Speaker B: That's not what you started off. You started off with the niggas problem. [00:46:35] Speaker A: And that's why I thought you framed it. Play the video. Okay, that's not connected. [00:46:43] Speaker B: Yeah, I just think that things have changed, right? The hoes are different now. [00:46:49] Speaker A: It's like the hoes are too proud. I still want my ho to be a little ashamed of her. Hodam. Whatever word that works better. [00:46:57] Speaker B: Emerald started that shit, right? [00:46:58] Speaker A: Yeah, that's what I'm saying. They're too proud. My problem is they're 18. They just jump straight to ho. Like they'll even try Hooters 1st. 18. They don't try twin peaks first. Those places first. And then they said, okay, I'm going to just be a ho. [00:47:12] Speaker B: No, I can't let you do hooters like that. Hooters. Ain't that nigga. [00:47:17] Speaker A: Hooters waitress no more. Stop hooter shaming, bro. Stop hooter shaming. [00:47:20] Speaker B: They got hot wings over there, nigga, like that. [00:47:21] Speaker A: And they're delicious. [00:47:22] Speaker B: Yes. [00:47:23] Speaker A: Let's fix that. [00:47:24] Speaker B: 12:00 on the dot. [00:47:26] Speaker A: Got mom. Dude said Frankie's in his joint going on, dude. Oh, my God, look at this. [00:47:33] Speaker C: That's the mom. [00:47:38] Speaker A: Don't play with her. Please don't. [00:47:44] Speaker B: Oh, yeah. [00:47:48] Speaker A: Son and mother. Her son just did that. Yes. And look what the mom's doing. Okay, so, listeners, what you weren't able to see was this mom. She's kind of a younger mom, I would say she's probably 37, 38. Her son is an adult, so she probably had him when she was 15, but he got her, like, some regular ass cake, really. Just a little piece of chocolate, a little piece of vanilla, and, like, a red velvet. [00:48:17] Speaker B: But it looked like a bottle. [00:48:18] Speaker A: Yeah, it was. Whatever. So she's in a get together at a bar, club, something like that. [00:48:23] Speaker B: It seems like bowling alley. [00:48:24] Speaker A: All her friends and family are inside, so she's smiling, taking pictures of it. The son reaches out and smacks her on her ass. But not like just one, like, good shot, my nigga. Like, you just went to, right, you. [00:48:37] Speaker B: Just made an and one, right? [00:48:38] Speaker A: Not like that. I'm talking about like a soft. Let the booty jiggle in your hands. Two taps. [00:48:42] Speaker B: Yeah, he went from the undercarriage. He cupped. [00:48:46] Speaker A: Yeah, right. And she felt compelled because of the booty jiggle that happened when he smacked it to then ass clap in front of her son because of that. And everybody's in the background while the son's recording. And their son is recording this. [00:48:56] Speaker C: I think he's a rapper, too. [00:48:58] Speaker A: I don't care, bro. That's what I'm saying. [00:49:01] Speaker B: This is the problem. [00:49:02] Speaker A: Don't write the passage. This is day and night. To me, though, the difference between somebody doing putting a dick pic on a bitch that they don't know, right? But for me, my thing is, there was a time young niggas would never think of doing that shit. What makes young niggas now think that's cool? [00:49:17] Speaker C: Too much Internet. [00:49:18] Speaker A: That's what I'm saying. It's because they've been seeing ass. Really? Day one. That's what I'm saying. [00:49:24] Speaker B: They've been seeing. [00:49:25] Speaker A: So again, they've seen their cousins post ass online. [00:49:28] Speaker B: They've seen everybody. It's not that. It's the fucking clout. Right, nigga? You know what I mean? [00:49:35] Speaker A: We're saying the same thing. [00:49:36] Speaker B: No, you're saying that it's because of whatever, right? [00:49:39] Speaker A: They've been posting ass for clout for the longest. [00:49:41] Speaker B: No, fuck all of that. I'm just saying, again, I had a homeboy Looney shout out to that nigga. His mom was a fucking baddie. [00:49:50] Speaker A: This is getting weird. [00:49:52] Speaker B: It did. It was one of those things where he used to have to tell niggas to calm the fuck down. [00:49:59] Speaker A: Can I just ask, did you all run a train on her? [00:50:01] Speaker B: Nobody ever got with his mom. [00:50:03] Speaker A: Okay? [00:50:03] Speaker B: But again, she would wear, like, those fucking Miss Parker, right? She would wear shit and every nigga would be like, let's come over to your house. Can we stay tonight? Like, listen, your mom in that damn fucking bodysuit, nigga is she knew what she was doing. Of course she did. You know what I mean? But she never let us get to that point. At least not nigga, any nigga I know. But everybody was like, yo, your mom is fucking all that over some of these bitches that would be out in the street. Like, your mom's a get it smooth, did it. And it's like, that was a thing. That's always been a thing. So again, to have your mom be somebody like this nigga's mom, that is attractive. That's not new, right? [00:50:47] Speaker A: We're not saying touch his mom's ass. [00:50:50] Speaker B: No, that's my point. [00:50:51] Speaker A: Again, I'm about to go Umar on y'all. [00:50:54] Speaker B: It was understood. That's off limits, my nigga. But there was no likes, nigga. You didn't get any clout for your mom being like that, right? You didn't get no extra, no likes or nobody else was fucking getting any views or none of that shit. So all of that shit is extra, right? So when you post this video, right, then you get all of that extra shit that before is external than what's really happening in real life, which is niggas wanting to fuck your mom, right? So niggas outside watching videos wanting to fuck your mom, that seems far away. That seems untouchable, right? Like these niggas are out here. Yes. They see your mom's ass, she's doing a fucking ass clapping, she's doing all this shit. But really, autumn, niggas that's watching it are going to have 0% chance of ever fucking your mom. The niggas that was around my niggas mom, if he did any of that shit, we had direct access, my nigga, like you fuck around and expose your mom like that to us and make it open game to us, nigga. While you at practice, nigga, I might be at your crib, let's be clear. No, I'm just saying if you open it up like that, right, listen to the extent in which you respect it. I got more respect. [00:52:10] Speaker A: Exactly. [00:52:10] Speaker B: If you don't respect it like that, I'm not giving you more respect than you do. [00:52:13] Speaker A: Exactly. You a dirt bag. [00:52:14] Speaker B: Do that shit again if you don't respect the shit. And that's the thing, right? You can disrespect or not have the same respect on social media because you know that the people that fucking are watching this are far away. And don't really have direct access. Maybe they'll try to slide in your mom's DMs. [00:52:33] Speaker A: So, you said because of the lack of access? Well, I think it's a different direction. Before we go, are you complete with your. Yeah, I'm about to Dr. Umar, y'all, because that's what I see. It's these young black women who have no man in the household asking these young men to be grown men before their time. So then when they get grown, they feel like, though, this is my first woman. Like, nigga, you can't be coming in this house talking crazy to my mom. You just a new nigga. And, like, yo, and he smacked his mom on the butt because that's his bitch. So you think that plays a higher role. Absolutely. Than just the constant absolutely softcore porn in this particular situation? Okay, I can see that. I'm not saying that the world is not more sexualized and niggas putting dicks up and women putting titties up is not OD. I can see that. What I'm saying is, in this particular case, a nigga has the nerve to put his hand on his mom's ass like that. [00:53:26] Speaker B: Not right. [00:53:29] Speaker A: And it may be what Mac is saying for clout, too, but I think, in the grander sense, this is the evidence of a generation or three of young black men who are asked to be grown ups because they're the quote unquote man of the house so early. So then when they actually become men, now, they're like, well, no, this is not. Who are you talking to, man? And he's a young rapper, so he probably got a little bread. [00:53:51] Speaker B: And it's not even that. I don't know if you listen to the last half baked, but it kind of was like I talked about when I was being raised by my mom, right? My mom, as far as fighting, right. Her response to me, it was like, listen, the thing we were talking about was, people don't fight no more, right? But I remember my mom directly telling me, like, listen, if you ain't winning, if you got to pick up a stick, a brick, a rock, do whatever you got to do. Right? You know what I mean? It wasn't just about throwing hands. It was about whatever you got to do to survive or to win this fight, do what you got to do, right? And again, thinking back about it now, I understand as a woman's point of view, right? Like, if you're a woman and a man is aggressing you, then you do all of that. [00:54:44] Speaker A: Sure. [00:54:45] Speaker B: But as a man, having raised a son, I'm like, listen, it don't have to escalate to all of that, right? Like, you can throw hands, and if you lose, you lose, my nigga. If your hands ain't enough, then you take some lumps, right? But you live to survive another day. But what I was taught was that shit ain't about survive. It ain't about letting that nigga survive, you know what I mean? It's like, again, if I pick up a rock or a brick or a bat or a stick or whatever and hit this motherfucker, there may not be another day, you know what I mean, for this dude. You know what I mean? But that's what I was taught by a single mother. And that was kind of like an aha moment for me to think, like, what he's talking about. Like, these single moms raising. [00:55:29] Speaker A: I never had that. [00:55:30] Speaker B: Single moms raising dudes. Their advice sometimes is good because of what they know, but it ain't good for a dude, right? It's good for a woman, right? Like, again, if you're a woman and you are being assaulted by a dude, yes. Anything and everything goes, right. Like, anything you can do, do to get this nigga up off you, get them up off you, right? If you got to pick up a rock, if you got to pick up a stick, if you got to pick up a knife, you got to pick up a gun. Whatever the fuck you got to do to get this dude up off you, because you are not, quote unquote, literally weaker than this person, then you got to do that. But as a dude, you have to learn how to maybe take an ass whooping, right? And understand that some lumps may come with fighting. And you know what? It ain't the end of the world. But we've gotten so far past that because we have this, like he said, two or three generations of niggas being raised by women. [00:56:25] Speaker A: I didn't even think about that. [00:56:26] Speaker B: That they're not even willing to take an ass whipping anymore. It's all about fucking survival, right? I'll buck your ass from the beginning, before you even come at me. I'm already fearful. I already fear for my life. I think that this could get out of hand. So here I'm just about to pull my pistol, and I'm about to let you have it. Fuck you. There used to be a time where that wasn't the case. You could go to a fucking brawl where two fucking groups of motherfuckers fought, and there was hell of niggas fighting. And some niggas got knocked out, some niggas got lumped up. Some niggas, whatever. But everybody walked away. Now, again, we have a premium, which is the half bake. I saw motherfucker pull out a pistol for honking. You know what I mean? Because they were driving too slow through the four way stop sign, and it got honked at a couple of times because they put the brakes on. And motherfuckers like, move. They could drop the fucking pistol out the window. Like, you will get it right now. And I was like, yo, Lotto says. [00:57:23] Speaker A: She'Ll go eat prison food or no. Who is that? It might have been glorilla. She'll go eat prison food before she let a bitch try her. [00:57:28] Speaker B: Right. You know what I mean? [00:57:31] Speaker C: Strong bar. [00:57:33] Speaker A: So be back to what you're saying. Well, let me ask you a question, French. Why would her boyfriend do that on Instagram? What would be the reason for doing that? What is he doing when he does that on camera? Trying to show off that he got peacock. He's peacocking and he's saying, this mine? Yeah. Do you think it's different for that guy? Honestly? [00:57:51] Speaker B: You want it to be my mama? [00:57:52] Speaker A: You want it to be. But that gives no other signal to the watcher. That's the only signal they go. That's not an endearing thing. It's possession. But what made me even more hands off. That's my bit. It's the mom being cool with it, so it's like she embraces it, bro. She raised him to be that. [00:58:09] Speaker B: What are you talking about? Right? [00:58:10] Speaker A: She said, now you're the man. And he was seven. [00:58:14] Speaker C: Let me show you how it's done. Type shit. [00:58:16] Speaker A: Right? Now you're the man. He's seven. [00:58:18] Speaker C: And also he is a rapper. That was a good clout move, even though it's babilisity, whatever. But it worked. [00:58:24] Speaker A: I guess we're talking about it. [00:58:26] Speaker B: I'm just saying. Again, talking about the music, there's a problem, right? Again, I think that the music don't make no money as far as our culture, right? And the nature of the single mom being, raising all of these men that are growing up to be men. And you could say, we've talked about it before on this show where fucking Father's Day comes and motherfuckers want to give shouts out to fucking women like single moms and shit. [00:59:01] Speaker C: I hate that shit, though. [00:59:01] Speaker A: It's stupid. [00:59:02] Speaker C: I hate that shit. [00:59:03] Speaker B: Dumb. [00:59:04] Speaker A: Need a mother, Father. It's our day. [00:59:08] Speaker B: I don't give a fuck. I don't give a fuck, again, if you did as a single mom, raise this dude, you know what I mean? Or raise all of your kids, you got Mother's Day, it doesn't matter. You end up probably raising niggas like this, right? Because again, there's a problem. You can't, as a woman, teach a man how to fuck a boy, how to be a man. I don't give a fuck what you do as a woman. You don't know what it is to be a man. That is fact. You know what I mean? And so the problem that we have is that there's a mass majority of niggas, especially in our culture, that have been raised by single moms, right? We talked about it with the professional sports, right? When you look at these niggas with these hyphenated names, that's a black thing. You don't see white people out there with fucking Jenkins, Jones and fucking, you know what I mean? There's not like, I'm repping my mom and my dad. No, nigga, no. [01:00:02] Speaker A: I'm repping my single mom and my dad, right? Because that's what it. [01:00:05] Speaker B: Right? [01:00:06] Speaker A: There are some who have married family. That's even weirder if you ask me, right? Like the mom wouldn't take the dad's name. [01:00:11] Speaker B: What are we doing? [01:00:11] Speaker A: But it's single moms. But we got a solution for that. Me and my crew, we're making it so genders don't matter no more. And so you can be a mom and raise a guy. [01:00:20] Speaker B: Fuck that. [01:00:20] Speaker A: Because genders don't matter. That's what they say now. [01:00:24] Speaker B: Fuck that. Genders matter. I remember I just made a fucking doctor's appointment. They asked me like, on the automated system, they was like, what was your gender at birth? [01:00:35] Speaker A: I went to the doctor, I had my physical this morning. They are going too far with the questions now. Like they was asking about, did you think about killing yourself the last four months? I'm like, since when we started acting? Well, you know what, though? This is my practitioner. This is not even my. As a veteran, every time I go to the VA, that question when you go in, no matter what's wrong with the first thing, have you had any suicidal thoughts or you have feelings of depression? That makes sense from VA, you know what I'm saying? But that's because every 11 seconds a veteran kills himself. Yeah, shit, it's that quick. Eleven minutes or something like that. It's a lot, but I think that that's turning into a human problem, not a veteran problem, right? Suicide is big. I ain't going to lie. Yeah, it was just weird. I'm like, yo, when did you all start doing all these extra questions? [01:01:19] Speaker B: Yeah, it is. But I think, too, all of that, again, going back to the single mom shit, is like, that's why we talk about CMB. [01:01:29] Speaker A: Compete. Marriage, babies. Those are the things to make black people reach the level we're supposed to be on. First of all, you get competitive, go to school, compete. Learn something that's valuable. That's compete. Right? Learn how to fight, learn how to skill, how to do something out of nothing. You know what I'm saying? That's compete. Marriage is get married, and three is have a baby. You married, right, Serge? [01:01:52] Speaker B: I am. [01:01:53] Speaker A: Because the thing is, Serge, even Barack Obama even did a study that. Well, he didn't do a study, but he reported on a study that as long as you get a high school diploma, have a full time job, and are married, you will not be under the poverty line. It's universal across races. [01:02:10] Speaker B: You will not be out of the poverty line. [01:02:12] Speaker A: You will not be under the poverty. [01:02:13] Speaker C: Okay, that's good. [01:02:15] Speaker A: And that's across all races. [01:02:17] Speaker C: That makes sense, though. [01:02:18] Speaker A: So that's why I'm like, let's elevate. Let's graduate. That idea, though. So let's really talk about what that means. That means, first of all, you got to be competitive. If you don't have a skill or a talent or anything, what are you doing for black people? What are you doing for black people? [01:02:31] Speaker B: Right? [01:02:32] Speaker A: So then you got to get competitive marriage, because if you're married, you are not going to be broke. You have two incomes in your house. [01:02:39] Speaker C: Maybe, to be honest. [01:02:41] Speaker A: Yeah, maybe. But I'm trying to make the chances better. Right. And then have a baby. Because babies in married households are going to be far more prepared for the world than babies in single households. And what black people need more than anything is to stop aborting babies. I think it was like some, like 10 million, since there's like 10 million abortions. Crazy for us. [01:03:03] Speaker B: Listen, the 70s, what Nas say, this thing, it was like to you motherfucking ghetto bitches, like, quit aborting your babies. [01:03:11] Speaker A: It's more than ten. That was understood. The thing that makes me sad about. [01:03:15] Speaker B: That, that's a hood rap. [01:03:16] Speaker A: Fucking wanted to. When you go back and you study Margaret Sanger and stuff. Yeah. They really made that shit a reality. Yeah. Planned Parenthood was a hood thing. It was a black neighborhood thing. And so that's the idea, is that in order for us to really be a people. Our babies got to be competitive and they got to know this already. So we have to put them in the position for that. [01:03:37] Speaker C: Do you believe in racial segregation to come back again? [01:03:40] Speaker B: That's the case. [01:03:41] Speaker C: Like, awesome Tulsa, Oklahoma vibe, having black wealth, Atlanta, Black Wall street. Do we believe at this point, in order to fix that problem, do we have to separate ourselves from the mass? [01:03:52] Speaker A: I think the evidence of not needing it is, you know. Have you always lived in Atlanta? Yes. Okay. French, you've always lived in. Well, you lived in Boston. Yeah, most of my young adult Mac lived in Sacramento and LA. And what everybody recognizes is that Atlanta is totally different because let's just make the most basic idea that will hit home for you. You're on the expressway and you see Rollsroyce, a really nice, brand new Rollsroyce on the expressway. As you're passing by him, it's up in the air. Who's inside that car? It's probably a black person. [01:04:24] Speaker B: I was going to say. Yeah, I'm going to say probably more than 50% likelihood. [01:04:29] Speaker A: But not in Sacramento or LA or Boston or any fucking other. Maybe DC. DC might be. Yeah, DC. Well, DC used to be the chocolate city, too. But the problem with DC is that most people don't live in DC. You're right. The hood people live in DC. But New York, LA, Houston, Atlanta, there are a couple of others. It's a possibility, but nothing like Atlanta. There's nothing like the amount, the percentage, the opportunity, the probability of it being a black person in Atlanta is very, very good. Whereas you go to Sacramento, there are probably no black people with phantoms, right? Yeah, maybe there's one. But they live actually in San Francisco, and they drove up for the weekend because their hood friend. You know what I'm saying? But are you saying that black guy in the wolves Royce in Atlanta made his money strictly off black wealth and black businesses? [01:05:17] Speaker B: No, doesn't matter. [01:05:18] Speaker A: Doesn't matter. He was talking about segregation. No, but that's why. Okay, let me advance the thought then. So the idea, though, is that do we need to be separate to make it possible? And the answer to me is Atlanta. We don't have to be separate to make it possible because there are white people here, too. There's everybody here. But black people have just figured out a way to be more affluent in Atlanta than any other place in the world. And that goes back to. I've never had a white mayor in my entire life, and I'm 48. I've never had a white mayor. [01:05:46] Speaker B: And I think that, honestly, I would say that there. [01:05:49] Speaker A: I don't think the city would want that. [01:05:52] Speaker B: I'm going to take it even a step further. I would think that there is actually more black people in Atlanta than. I mean, I would say black people are not the minority. [01:06:02] Speaker C: Sure. [01:06:03] Speaker A: Why are we changing now? I think it's changing. We weren't. Yeah. Them whites from New York are coming. Them whites, the whites, crackers. Yeah, they're coming. [01:06:13] Speaker B: There is a gentrification. I've seen it. Definitely. [01:06:18] Speaker A: But none of y'all live in a black neighborhood but me. Yeah, that's true. [01:06:22] Speaker B: Shout out to Van Hill. [01:06:27] Speaker A: Springs. None of you all live in a black neighborhood. So you're saying. [01:06:31] Speaker B: But you all gentrify the Migos state. Where they get. I came from. They get like, East Atlanta, nigga. [01:06:39] Speaker A: No, they're from Gwinnett. [01:06:40] Speaker B: I know. That's me, too. That's what I'm saying. East Atlanta. [01:06:44] Speaker A: That's not East Atlanta. [01:06:47] Speaker B: What do they say, though? What do they say? They say East Atlanta. [01:06:50] Speaker A: East Atlanta is like Gucci, man. [01:06:52] Speaker C: That's where I savage all that stuff. [01:06:55] Speaker A: Well, there's a part of Decatur that links with Gwinnett. [01:06:58] Speaker B: I know it does. [01:06:59] Speaker A: Yeah. [01:06:59] Speaker C: Snellville right there. [01:07:03] Speaker B: You know what I mean? But, yeah, I just feel like the fact that there is segregation is funny to me because I think. Yes. Part of me is for that, right? Because again, I watch the jewish people. Right? Again. Kill the game. Right. They have a monopoly on something. Like no other race. [01:07:30] Speaker A: Something. [01:07:31] Speaker B: On something, my nigga. I don't know what it is on something. Like no other race there is, but part of that is that they fuck with each other like nobody else's business either. Right. They understand that. [01:07:44] Speaker A: Listen, no child left behind, for real. [01:07:46] Speaker B: Right? You are us. We hold each other down, like, whatever. You know what I mean? Their fucking cohesiveness is next level, too. And I think that that's something that we, as black people lack sorely. And I don't know if we can ever even get to that. [01:08:05] Speaker A: No. Because, nigga, let a black child run away. That baby is gone. [01:08:09] Speaker B: Right. [01:08:10] Speaker A: They bringing that motherfucker home. [01:08:11] Speaker B: Bring them home. [01:08:12] Speaker A: Here's your kid. I don't know what's going on, but you need to be in the house. If I see you out again, I'm going to bring you back again. [01:08:17] Speaker B: Right. [01:08:17] Speaker A: That's the type of community. Yeah. That's the type of situation. But we used to have that, though. That was a. [01:08:22] Speaker B: Did we, French? [01:08:23] Speaker C: Yes, we did, actually, until they burned out the towns. [01:08:25] Speaker A: When you look at black history in America, even after civil niggas was married to their wives and stayed in the house, it was like something around the 70s shit. Something, my nigga. You know what happened? Crack. Crack. It was that. And it was all Elena B. Johnson shit. It was all of that. Yeah, that's what I'm saying. All of that happened, and then shit changed. So we had that value, like, in the culture. [01:08:49] Speaker B: I feel like we did. I remember even in the early 80s, right, I think there was a sense of black pride, right? Whether it was fucking the african symbol, right? Exclamation, the red and the green, right? Even fucking KRs one, there was a whole community as far as black people teaching each other how to be better, be competitive, right, and lifting each other up as opposed to fucking knocking each other down. Where I feel like that's where we're at now. [01:09:26] Speaker A: And you know what's so crazy? I'm sorry, go ahead. It's just that we've spoken about this many times on the show that gangster rap was the beginning of that for a lot of people. And that ushered in, what, the crack era. And Linda B. Johnson providing government assistance to mothers. All that was all kind of at the same time. So even if you weren't a black mother, you were a young man listening to gangster rap, because it was the craziest shit you'd ever heard, right? And all of that together is formed where we are now. And I know that sucks, because I don't want to be the guy that's saying, rap this about whatever is you can't listen to it. We just talked about sexy Red. I know, but the difference, though, is that I'm not listening to sexy red for instructions. [01:10:09] Speaker C: Yeah, but they are outside. [01:10:11] Speaker A: But there's something. And there are young girls and young guys who are listening for the instructions of it. And in one of the lines, she said, I only know, man, they're trying to separate the marriage. Yeah. And I mean, I think back to when I heard fuck the police the first time. Or no, actually, the first song I heard was he was once a dolphin around our way. What was that song? [01:10:29] Speaker B: Eazy. Eazy does it. Eazy does it. [01:10:31] Speaker A: Right? First time I heard Eazy does it, my nigga. Because that came out before straight out of Compton, right? Yeah. Easy. [01:10:35] Speaker B: That was on Eazy's album. [01:10:37] Speaker A: Nigga, what the fuck is up in the place to be? Coming on the mic is easy motherfucking E. And this is a me. As a kid, you had never heard curse words like that. You know what's funny to us is different. But to you all, to think that's, like, the first time that type of style came out, it's kind of crazy to hear it for the first time. First time. I couldn't believe they had a little kid singing. And then he said, bitch, shut the fuck up. Get the fuck out of here. Like, what, a kid just said something, and now there's a grown ass nigga talking about, bitch, shut the fuck up. And it wasn't even a little girl, I don't think. I think it was a little boy, right? Still. Bitch, shut the fuck up. Get the fuck out of here. Yo, Dre. What up? Give me a funk ass bass line. And I had never even heard cursing on a song before, other than like, damn or something. And run DMC, right? You know what saying? So, like, meanwhile, we're blaming it all on single black moms, but we're taking the fucking carrot, too. We're taking the bait. Like, I love gangster rap. When Cdlores Tucker was going against Tupac back in the day, I was like. [01:11:28] Speaker B: Fuck sure, for sure. [01:11:31] Speaker A: And she was right. [01:11:32] Speaker B: No, she had a lot of fucking understanding. Right? This is not great for, like, as far know, our young people listen into this shit. [01:11:43] Speaker A: No, but that's the problem, though. See, it's okay if we had the right people in place saying, hey, this is just an act. This is just entertainment. And that's what they always said. But that's not what they said. What they start saying. Keeping it real. Keeping it real. If you're not authentic, if you ain't real, nigga, then we're not going to believe your message. You got to kill somebody. You got to be what you say in your raps, and you got to embody all this, right? So now these niggas are showing you, okay, we're embodying it. Now you mad? [01:12:09] Speaker B: And it's funny, because when it was New York, right, even when New York rap mean, that's the original. That's. Everybody started off with fucking run DMC and fucking Kumo D and fucking big Daddy Kane and all these niggas from the east coast, there was a lot of storytelling and telling about where you were. It was some of that shit, know, hard, but it wasn't. [01:12:40] Speaker A: There wasn't anything like the schoolie d in, right? [01:12:44] Speaker B: You're right. [01:12:45] Speaker A: They were still wasn't. [01:12:48] Speaker B: It wasn't like when nwa and eazy e hit the right. [01:12:52] Speaker A: Like, Brandy Mc had a song with. [01:12:53] Speaker B: Aerosmith, even ICE tea. Right, which was before both of them niggas right. ICE tea. He was talking gang shit, right? But six in the morning, police at. [01:13:06] Speaker A: My door, which is a schooly d song that he. [01:13:08] Speaker B: Right. No, I understand. You already schooled me on that, nigga. You already schooled me on that, right. [01:13:13] Speaker A: Did he pay for it? No, it was before that kind of shit. [01:13:19] Speaker B: But even his rap wasn't as hard as what ICE cube and eazy e brought fucking with Nwa. [01:13:29] Speaker A: No, it turned it. I was. I was turned mean. [01:13:35] Speaker B: Fuck the. [01:13:40] Speaker A: But this is my thing, too. It was a reality that was going on in the street. [01:13:46] Speaker B: It was. And I think that's what resonated with everybody. [01:13:49] Speaker A: They made fake stories. And then we started shooting. We were shooting niggas and niggas, like we got. But it was another nigga shooting somebody then, right? [01:13:57] Speaker B: We didn't need to hear it. This is the thing. I don't think we needed it to be first person like that. Like, he was talking about it. [01:14:05] Speaker A: That really make a difference? [01:14:06] Speaker B: It did back then. [01:14:07] Speaker C: The street niggers want to be low key nowadays in rap. The street niggers want to be known. Yo, I just caught a body today, right? [01:14:14] Speaker A: Who's that little young dude that just got convicted? He had like, 27 bodies or something. Like, he's a serial killer rapper. He's a young nigga, like, kia young Kia or something like that. Kia. It's probably something like that. This nigga got like 27 bodies. And he's been rapping about these bodies on his songs for weeks and went crazy in the streets. And now he's convicted, and it's like, well, he kept it real. He kept it real. Real. [01:14:37] Speaker B: Too real. [01:14:39] Speaker A: What was his name? The one AK? Yeah, he's got like a life sentence, right? Yeah. [01:14:46] Speaker C: He was like 1415 a convicted. [01:14:48] Speaker A: Yeah. Running crazy. Running and dropping a mixtape while catching bodies. [01:14:53] Speaker B: So again, I think that's the thing, right? Like, there was a nigga out in. I can't even think of his name. [01:14:58] Speaker A: So are you saying that, in fact. [01:14:59] Speaker B: That brother lynch hung, he was a different dude? [01:15:05] Speaker A: What kind name like that? You better be. [01:15:07] Speaker B: And he would rap about shit that he did that was real. Don't. I don't understand the point in that. I think that's the early. That was pre YouTube let me film or world star. It was like, I'm smarter than the fucking police, and I'm going to talk about some shit that really happened. And they not going to be able to catch the breadcrumbs type shit, but it happened. You can't really do dirt like that. And then rap about it and think that the fucking police are that ignorant that they're not going to be able to put two and two together on Instagram right now. [01:15:47] Speaker A: Right? [01:15:48] Speaker B: That's all they do now. I feel like right now, we talked about it. If you're a detective now, it's the easiest time to be a detective in all of history. [01:15:55] Speaker A: You don't even need Charlote Holmes no more. [01:15:57] Speaker B: Like the fuck Sherlock Holmes motherfuckers is telling on themselves, you don't even need 1st 48. [01:16:02] Speaker A: You don't even have to watch you put AI on that shit. AI will watch and listen for words and give you. [01:16:08] Speaker B: You don't even need snitching no more. Like, really? Niggas is self snitching all the time, thinking that they slick and it's like. [01:16:15] Speaker A: Okay, but you know how they get you, though? They don't tell you that they're on to you. They just keep letting. They just let you keep doing it because you're getting more success. You think, oh, shit, they're never going to know, actually. They're just waiting. They're waiting until they can't. Yeah, until they do something like a Rico or something that you can't pull off yourself. Like, yo, I can't unhook this to me because they know it's me because I've said it in songs. So, yeah, that's still just waiting. [01:16:37] Speaker B: It just doesn't make any sense, man, to me. But, yeah, I just feel like we, as a culture, I hate to say it, if we could be more jewish, I would love it. Literally. [01:16:52] Speaker A: Hi, Kanye. [01:16:54] Speaker B: And what I mean by that is, again, the way that they fucking look out for each other, the way that they support each other, the way that there's a fucking. It's not like we're out here trying to be detrimental to each other. We don't want none of that. If you are out here doing fuck, shit, someone's going to check you. There used to be in the neighborhood, like, when I grew up, everybody on the block, all the adults on the block had fucking authority, position. If anybody that my mom knew saw me acting a fucking fool, they on site. [01:17:27] Speaker A: You can't do that. [01:17:29] Speaker B: They could get with it. [01:17:30] Speaker A: Parents can even beat their kids. [01:17:31] Speaker B: No, right? Exactly. [01:17:33] Speaker A: What would be our Havana gila? Before I let go. [01:17:40] Speaker B: No one even. [01:17:41] Speaker A: Gives know what black person, you know, stays seated when Frankie Beverly says, whoa, whoa. Everybody jumps up. [01:17:53] Speaker B: It's going to be shuffle, right? It's going to be the fucking. The cuban shuffle, the electric slide. That's going to be our hobbit. [01:17:59] Speaker A: I'd rather be before I let go. At least that's quality music. Cuban shuffle is crazy because look, I'm talking about when was cuban shuffle four ish. Four was it. It was around that time, I think, bro. In 2011 or so, I was managing an artist, maybe it was six. And we were doing a McDonald's. McDonald's. They were coming out with a McAfee or something. And so they were trying to get reach urban markets. So they were having R and B artists perform at these little pop up tent things. So my artist was performing, but Cupid shuffle. Cupid or whatever his name is. Cupid, actually, 2007, he was there and I'm like, yo, this is so old. I don't think people are going to really. Man, they fuck with that song, bro. [01:18:41] Speaker B: Till this day, people who weren't even. [01:18:43] Speaker A: At the McDonald's pop up shit, they were at that because they would be at a McDonald's. But like outside in a lot somewhere, people from McDonald's were coming out. When they heard that, bro, it was just people stopping their cars. [01:18:52] Speaker B: It's their Kool Aid shuffle. [01:18:54] Speaker A: This nigga's still touring off Cuba Shuffle. That's. Bro, he tried to do another song. [01:18:58] Speaker B: They were like, okay, fuck that. [01:18:59] Speaker A: We're sitting there. [01:19:01] Speaker B: That's like, who let the dogs out? They get like that. [01:19:05] Speaker A: Who is that for? Black folks don't get into that, do they? Who let the dogs out, my nigga? No, you always be showing your weirdness. [01:19:19] Speaker B: He know who it was. That's all they had. And then motherfuckers. That shit fucking goes everywhere. [01:19:29] Speaker A: I get what you're saying now. You're saying like one hit wonder and still perform off, right? Shit. Tony Terry still performs when I'm with you dead series. I've seen him do it. And that'd be his song. He probably got three or four more that he does, right? Nobody's paying attention. [01:19:42] Speaker C: I just seen a video, Jay Holiday singing bed out of off pitch. [01:19:47] Speaker B: I remember when I was in corporate, you know what I mean? And we had a fucking, like something event, I think, oh, my God, look at this snob. [01:19:54] Speaker A: I remember when I was in corporate. No, back when I was a slave to the man. Fuck out of here. Isn't. They're not in corporate for three weeks. When I was back in corporate. [01:20:08] Speaker C: Switch up, go crazy. [01:20:10] Speaker B: It is. It's like changing from fucking Android to fucking iPhone. You like looking at them fucking corporates like green bubbles, like a motherfucker. Like these niggas. What don't text me in real talk. We didn't really touch on that. But this fucking Android versus iPhone shit, I didn't understand it. Again, I understood, like, I mean, I left iPhone and I was Android, and people were like, oh, green bubble, this, that, and the other. But I didn't realize how deep this shit ran until just recently when I switched back, when all my niggas that were fucking androids were hitting me up. Like, I know you didn't go to the dark side, my nigga. It's some real gang related type shit. These motherfuckers are like, even today, how you can text message. I'm in a group text message, and you could hold it down and fucking put ha ha. Or laugh at some shit. On an Android, it says laughed at, right? My sister was like, look at this new iPhone, motherfucker, with the laughed at shit. And I'm like, nigga, I'm not going to use the feature that gives me. [01:21:22] Speaker A: So, Matt, who won? Who's winning? Android or Apple or iOS right now? Who's winning? Not subjectively, objectively, who's winning? [01:21:32] Speaker B: Oh, iPhones. [01:21:33] Speaker A: Why do you say that? [01:21:34] Speaker B: Because I think that they're the Jews of cellular phones. [01:21:40] Speaker A: I'll tell you the proof. [01:21:41] Speaker B: Their cohesiveness is on something like Android is split. It's like the black community. You could be Samsung. You could be fucking Google. You could be fucking all these different random ass fucking sex. The fucking iPhone is a cohesive family. Like, it's Apple, and it's fucking. Everybody that's inside this group is fucking like the Jews. We all lift each other up. If you Apple gang, you apple gang, nigga. Like, regardless, if you got an se, nigga. If you got a fucking plus, it doesn't matter, nigga. Like, your blue bubble gives you. Granted. [01:22:19] Speaker A: Let me tell you the proof of this. Just like you saw, what you alluded to was when you left and came here, niggas was on your neck, right? But remember, when you left iOS, nobody called for you. Nobody was checking like, oh, fuck him. Oh, well, that's how you know Apple's winning, because we don't give a fuck if you leave. It's like, whatever. We're going to joke you if you have a green bubble. And we're going to be like, yo, get an iPhone, bro. But when you leave, nigga. Bye, Android. They're like, no, we need you. Don't go, look at this guy with this. Look at it with this laugh, dad. But we're like, yeah, we don't give a fuck because I can just see that laugh. I don't got to see a message telling me about the laugh secondhand, nigga. [01:22:58] Speaker B: The funny thing is, right? So at first I didn't like it, right? Because again, I couldn't tell who had laughed at, right. Like, on an Android, I see individually who said who did what. Now I just see overlays of a ha ha or exclamation or whatever the fuck, right? And I'm like, well, who did that? I don't fucking know. I'm like, where can I find out who did what? And someone's like, you don't. [01:23:21] Speaker A: I'm like, yeah, you can you just tap and hold. [01:23:23] Speaker B: Oh, I see. They don't know. [01:23:25] Speaker A: Go to the ha ha. Tap your finger on the Haha and hold. [01:23:28] Speaker B: Okay. [01:23:28] Speaker A: And it'll pop up at the top of screen. They'll show their name or their emoji. [01:23:31] Speaker B: Or avatar for all everything that if. [01:23:34] Speaker A: Ten people said hi, you'll see which ten said it. [01:23:36] Speaker B: Okay. All right. Because again, the person that I was asking is not really they knew, but no, they don't know. They just fucking have an iPhone. They're not really into it. They're like, borderline Jew. [01:23:49] Speaker A: They're just jewish. [01:23:50] Speaker B: They're not a full blown Jew, right? It's like their dad's jewish, not their mom. [01:23:55] Speaker A: Can you say jewish? Or would that be negative? [01:23:58] Speaker B: Because you know that's what it takes to be a Jew, right? [01:24:00] Speaker A: What? [01:24:01] Speaker B: Your mom. Oh, really? [01:24:02] Speaker A: Oh, yeah. Yeah. [01:24:03] Speaker B: Your mom has to. Your mom's heritage, right? If your dad's jewish and he marries someone that's not Jew, you're not a Drake. [01:24:12] Speaker A: Wait a minute. No, Drake is. Drake's mom is jewish. [01:24:16] Speaker B: It's got to be the mom. And I didn't know that. And I was like, oh, that's deep. [01:24:20] Speaker A: Do y'all know that Drake's uncle is Larry Graham, the nigga who basically invented the slap bass? Yeah. No, his dad is Dennis Graham. His dad was, like, a singer too. Yeah, but Larry Graham was a nigga. He was a guy. He was a stud. Like, he was an R B dude. Like, people a one in a million. You. That's Drake's uncle. [01:24:39] Speaker B: Nigga really too tapped in, man. [01:24:43] Speaker A: And he invented for most people the slap bass. So before him, he was like, boom, boom, boom. He invented that shit that slapped the bass from Graham central Station. That was his group. [01:24:55] Speaker B: It was destined. Wow. [01:24:57] Speaker A: He grew up with the niggas, too, because he said in the summers, his mom sent him with his dad, and then he spent the summers with his dad and uncle. [01:25:05] Speaker B: He also said his dad. He's waiting on his dad. He never showed up too. [01:25:11] Speaker A: Drake was the first emotional nigga, right? Was he the first Kanye? Kanye heartaches and 808 and heartbreaks for sure. Yeah, everybody came after that. [01:25:21] Speaker B: Yes. [01:25:21] Speaker A: That's so weird, right, Cudi? That isn't that weird that he never gets credit for being like. Because I know that they don't get the credit. He doesn't. I think he gives himself the credit. They give Drake that credit. The first singing, rapping mixture kind of guy. [01:25:33] Speaker C: Oh, I think everyone gives Kanye the credit. [01:25:35] Speaker B: See, Kanye. Kanye. And I think what it is, even. [01:25:39] Speaker A: Drake will give Kanye. [01:25:40] Speaker B: Kanye became a character at some point, right? But I think what people forget is original. Kanye was a different. Right. Like, again, I think he hit on so many mean. He was the fucking J. Cole before J. Cole. He's the nigga that's like, you better get you. He's the nigga that's working at the mall or fucking going to school. That's not. You know what I mean? [01:26:04] Speaker C: A college dropout, right? [01:26:06] Speaker B: A college dropout. Like, this nigga's going to school but. [01:26:08] Speaker A: Then beats a day for three summers, bro. [01:26:11] Speaker B: He was the one that wasn't afraid. I'm not from the street necessarily. I'm not claiming to be hard nigga. Like all this other. Because gangster rap had taken over. And he's like, I'm not trying to be all of that. I'm something different. But this different kills the fucking game. The first three albums of Kanye. All classics, bro. [01:26:31] Speaker A: Yeah, those first three albums are classic. But to me, is my dark twisted fantasy one of the first three? No, because you got to include that. What are we talking about? It's because the fourth. Well, it's the first five. [01:26:41] Speaker B: Okay, the first five. [01:26:42] Speaker C: What's the fifth one? [01:26:43] Speaker A: The fifth one is my beautiful, isn't it? College, late graduation, 808. And then my beautiful. Yeah, and then he gave you the 808. Heartbreaks is not a bad album. Life of Pablo is up there for me, too. Life of Pablo was weird for me. It was a lot of weirdness going on. [01:27:01] Speaker B: Was that the one where Jesus walks? [01:27:03] Speaker A: No, that's college drive. Jesus Walks is probably the biggest college driver. What's crazy about that record is probably the biggest gospel record ever. But it's not gospel, right? [01:27:13] Speaker B: He was rocking for the Lord. Nobody else on hip hop ever even. Only God can judge me. Wasn't even on some shit like this. [01:27:23] Speaker A: But the thing you said about Kanye being. I still think that's the same chemical that he's doing now. He's just doing it. He always did the thing that nobody would do. He would be the black nigga to wear a pink polo. Nobody was going to do that in four. Now he's Cameron. [01:27:38] Speaker B: I was about to say cam. [01:27:39] Speaker A: Pink, pink. I'm talking about the pink polo with. [01:27:41] Speaker B: Pink collar, pink everything. [01:27:43] Speaker A: What are you talking about? It's not even about just the pink color. It's about the style of the clothes he was wearing. Nobody was ever going to try that. The time, just like now, no niggas going to put the trump hat. But I think he's still doing the same thing. He's just. Because he's done it all now he has to do the crazy shit, like saying, fuck jewish people. [01:28:06] Speaker B: It's so weird that you said Trump. And then I looked at you, and then I see that this nigga's got a maGA hat. [01:28:12] Speaker A: Read the hat. Read the hat. Anything but Trump. It says anything but Trump. Anybody but, yeah, yeah, the rock. So I think he's still doing the same thing. It's just, he's done it for so long, now he's getting to the levels. Yo, you're doing extreme shit now. Before it was, oh, pink polo for a nigga from the hood. Now it's. That was extreme. It didn't offend anybody's sensibility. Think about. He went to national TV and say, george Bush don't give a fuck about black people. That was iconic. I watched that live. He stopped the whole Grammys to let everybody know. Taylor Swift, he's still the same nigga. Like, this is not a new. [01:28:50] Speaker B: The. George Bush doesn't care about black people. [01:28:52] Speaker C: I love that. [01:28:53] Speaker A: Nobody was expecting that, bro. [01:28:55] Speaker B: Not even what I thought. It was like a fucking MTV news break or some shit. [01:29:05] Speaker C: No, Hurricane Katrina telethon. [01:29:07] Speaker A: Yeah, they were doing a drive for Hurricane Katrina. So for the day, the ten days before that, or maybe more, America was basically like, how the fuck is this even possible to happen in America? [01:29:19] Speaker B: I was there. [01:29:19] Speaker A: Whatever. [01:29:20] Speaker B: Hey, listen, I was there in California, figuring that, asking the same question everybody was. [01:29:24] Speaker A: And so then we're like, I don't even know who to blame. Kanye comes on, says, george Bush doesn't care about black people. And it all clicked. Everybody at one time was like, oh. And then niggas started doing the levees and realized this shit was never controlled. Then they started asking, well, why did George Bush fly over three times but not go down to rescue? [01:29:41] Speaker B: How come niggas still don't got water. It was a trip. The fact that you're like, we can get to third world countries and get shit to motherfuckers that are in help and in need of shit faster than we're helping these motherfuckers in Louisiana. This doesn't make any sense. And you're right. That was wild. But yeah, hey, Kanye doesn't get his flowers as much as he fucking deserves, I think. Now that I'm fucking talking about it. [01:30:12] Speaker A: I think he's antics, but also think. [01:30:16] Speaker C: He'S playing billionaire games. [01:30:17] Speaker A: Like, mind you, he ain't a billionaire no more, though. [01:30:19] Speaker C: In theory, bro. Like, Forbes is lying. But when you're now with the elites, the elites are what you allude to. [01:30:25] Speaker A: You got to talk closer, bro. [01:30:26] Speaker C: The elites are what you allude to. The jewish people who are in charge on our stuff as well. So when you're beef with Adidas, Adidas is now taking your shoes, your deals, and say, we're going to make the. [01:30:34] Speaker B: Same copy without easy on it, but. [01:30:37] Speaker A: Nobody'S going to buy it. [01:30:38] Speaker C: But, yeah, they have the right to. [01:30:39] Speaker A: Yeah. [01:30:39] Speaker C: So it's kind of like, these are the games he's playing with. So I think he has to even be more loud to trigger, hey, look, in order for me to influence change to the masses, I need to call out what the boss are doing to artists. [01:30:53] Speaker A: Yeah, I think he's just doing it the wrong way. I think Jay Z's doing the same thing. [01:30:56] Speaker C: Is there ever a right way to do it, though, to be a disruptor. [01:30:59] Speaker A: For it to really work? There's a right way. [01:31:01] Speaker C: I think it kind of worked so far. Same as Dave Chappelle. He told people, don't watch the Dave Chappelle show on Netflix or whatever they have. [01:31:07] Speaker A: But he did it the right way because the first thing Dave Chappelle did, he left. He left wing got quiet. You know what saying? Like, he did it so to rebuild that value so his fan base can be like, yeah, we ain't gonna watch. Like we understood with Kanye. It's like, they're not letting me see my kids. Okay? Hella niggas can't see their kids. You know what? Like, it's different. [01:31:28] Speaker C: I think, for that. What you're trying to tan, you're trying to say. Kanye's trying to say, hey, look, I'm trying to be an actor, black father. What we talked about before, single moms, by you omitting me to see actors to my kids, you're going to make. [01:31:38] Speaker B: My kid feel like a single mom. [01:31:39] Speaker C: Is the only way to go. But he actually wants to be there. He has the money. Even say he bought a house across the street from. [01:31:45] Speaker A: And they say he was a stalker because of that. That is some weird shit, though. Yeah. Listen, but cool as hell if you can afford it. [01:31:51] Speaker B: If you can do it. If you can do it, like, buy. [01:31:53] Speaker A: Somebody out, they shit like, yo, I'm your new neighbor. Listen, ho, come out of my box. She was fucking with Pete Davidson. [01:32:00] Speaker C: That was crazy. [01:32:01] Speaker B: That was wild, weird, and the nigga tatted the kids names on his neck. But anyways, let me ask you guys a question, man. I know that three of us have been married. Two of us are married. You two are married. Be honest. And, church, what would you say? [01:32:19] Speaker A: We're doing our part for the black community. [01:32:21] Speaker B: Congratulations. And I'm falling off, man. But what is. Except for I'm still raising a black man, right? I'm doing that part as a single mom. [01:32:31] Speaker A: As a single mom, right. [01:32:33] Speaker B: I'm taking Mother's Day. [01:32:35] Speaker A: Don't take no woman. Now, listen. [01:32:37] Speaker B: No, fuck that. No, I want gifts on Mother's Day. Like, fuck that shit. I want it all, too. [01:32:43] Speaker A: Fuck that shit. Can we get your son patting you on the ass in a video? Not just pat, grab it, too. Fill the cup. [01:32:51] Speaker C: And then you got to make a clap after. [01:32:54] Speaker A: I want to see the jiggly lemon. [01:32:57] Speaker B: And all the question I was asking, right? Because for a minute, I was kind of frustrated with the fact that another nigga fucked my ex wife, right. That was a problem. Right. For me. But I kind of have gotten over that. With the understanding, right, that she's no longer your wife. No, that there is a specific value for married pussy. [01:33:28] Speaker C: What it is highly. How do I say? Attractive for. [01:33:33] Speaker B: So, again, as a. Now, a nigga that's out in the. That's a single. I understand. Right? Like, you know, Rando, pussy is scary. That's like picking up a grenade, right? I know you were, like, three days, and that's good enough. I know that we're good. I could eat the ass. But for the majority of it, right. It's like, you don't know where this bitch has been, right, at this point. Really? Definitely. It's got to be some referral pussy for me, right? You got to come with references. Right? [01:34:03] Speaker A: So you want to have Eskimo brothers because you said referral pussy, somebody they fuck, too. Yeah, that's not what he meant by referral. He comes over to a party at my house, and there's a woman that I know. [01:34:18] Speaker B: Right. Definitely not Eskimo. [01:34:21] Speaker A: Brothers. [01:34:22] Speaker B: Definitely no Eskimo brothers. I don't want none of that. How my dictators, right? Like, I don't want none of that. I don't want no Eskimo brothers. If anything, nigga, I'll be a nigga Eskimo brother. But I don't want to listen. I can't control that. Like, again, if a nigga want to fuck after me, that's on him, right? You know what I mean? [01:34:42] Speaker A: That's what. You're the big brother. [01:34:43] Speaker B: Yeah. The whole thing as far as the streets, and it's really these women, right? They're real reckless with the pussy. Now, I feel. [01:34:53] Speaker A: Told you the price went down. [01:34:54] Speaker B: I feel like bitches don't even check niggas fingers before they let him stick them in a pussy. Nigga could have dirt underneath his fingernails. [01:35:02] Speaker A: I hate pornos. When I see, what are they called? When it's like, amateur, but it's, like, homemade or whatever. And then they go have his hand in the clip, like, oh, I had to cut that shit off, bro. Any bitch that will let this nigga hand touch, right, I'm done. [01:35:16] Speaker B: Exactly. [01:35:17] Speaker A: I judged the house, too. The shit on the floor, air mattress. I don't know. I'll subscribe. [01:35:27] Speaker B: And I'm just saying, they are real reckless with who they'll let fuck with the pussy, right? So it's like, yo, I get it. As a dude. If you're out here and you're trying to fuck some shit, what is more fucking high value than some married pussy? Like, this shit has been marinating, right? Like, this shit has been fucking aged. Like some fucking fine tequila. This is some inejo type pussy, right? This has been aged. And the longer she'd been married, hopefully, right? [01:35:58] Speaker A: Yeah. [01:35:59] Speaker B: This shit has been off the market, nigga, before there was ever forever chlamydia, nigga. [01:36:03] Speaker A: Like, this, even cheating motherfuckers don't. Just, those women don't always be cheating, right? Or they'll cheat with one guy and it'll be like their side boyfriend. [01:36:11] Speaker B: Exactly. [01:36:11] Speaker A: They won't just be loose in the street. [01:36:13] Speaker B: So I understand now a nigga wanting to come for some married pussy. Because again, if there is an option between these fucking single bitches out here just giving these dirty fingered ass niggas the pussy and a bitch that has pussy been on fucking marinate for fucking 15 years, you're like, well, that's the safest shit that I could get. Again, the longer she been married, right? So if you just newly wed, right, like, you just came off the market maybe not so much like your pussy, probably. Maybe. Okay, but it's been just a few minutes. But if you've been married for a long time, that's like fucking that age Kobe beef, you know what I mean? That shit's been fucking wagyu. That's wagyu pussy. [01:36:59] Speaker A: Look at the marbling. [01:37:01] Speaker B: Look at the marbling in that motherfucker, bro. And I get it now, right, because of that. [01:37:07] Speaker A: But it makes sense. Yeah. No, seriously. [01:37:09] Speaker B: I used to be fucking like these niggas is, but now I get it. Nigga, why wouldn't you want this shit, right? And it's funny because I understand now that these married bitches know this shit too, right? Because these niggas is letting them know, right? Like, yo fucking marbling ass pussy that's been on the shelf for fucking however many years. That's that shit that I'm looking for. Because I know I feel like it's safe, right? Like I don't have to worry like I would this bitch in the club that is fucking. [01:37:41] Speaker A: Not only that, it's safe. [01:37:42] Speaker B: Mechanic ass niggas with fucking oil underneath their fingers. [01:37:45] Speaker A: Not only that, it's safe because she's married, you know, ain't going to be no aftermath after the fucking well, separate. [01:37:52] Speaker B: I think that's secondary, though, right, to me, I know you worried more about fucking babies than STDs, right? But I think a lot of niggas don't want their dick to fall off or some shit that fucking is attached to them forever, right? Like they can't shake. [01:38:05] Speaker A: I've considered that definitely. [01:38:07] Speaker B: It could take forever, right? [01:38:09] Speaker A: But the thing about married women is, my issue with that was once the nigga find out one on you. No, sure. [01:38:19] Speaker B: You do have to worry about the repercussions that come along with that, right? I get that. And it's funny because I'm not sitting here being holier than thou. I don't want to do that, okay? I have fucked married bitches, player. I'm just saying as a younger person, in my younger days, I have done that, right? And I understand now, again, the mindset that it wasn't fully earth. It didn't come to my why this was okay or why I was more willing to do this than go and fucking find a single bitch. Because, again, this was safe, right? Like, this bitch wasn't out in the streets, right? There was less risk, except for the dude, right? Like, again, getting caught. Obviously, you have to deal with the husband, but outside of that, this is some low risk pussy in all other aspects. And so my question is less if the husband was cheating even then. Yeah, you're right. Because he bringing back shit. Right. [01:39:23] Speaker A: With a dude. Maybe. [01:39:26] Speaker B: All of that shit is in fair play now, but for me, I just kind of had this epiphany about this shit, and I was like, yo, I ain't mad at niggas for wanting this shit. Because, again, I understand now. This makes all the sense in the world. So what is the value? I feel like, again, first off, if this is the case, I need to get my flowers as the husband. Because the reason why your pussy is so valuable is me, bitch. Right? Let's be clear. Because you are married is why this is added value to your pussy. [01:40:01] Speaker A: So, like a pimp, you got to have a split on that. I don't know. I tell my wife all the time, you lucky as hell. Look at these motherfuckers out here. [01:40:08] Speaker B: For real. [01:40:09] Speaker A: Like, you lucky. I mean, I know that's arrogant, but. [01:40:12] Speaker B: No, I talk to shit. No, I think it's imperative that they understand that. Right? [01:40:19] Speaker A: Because, again, they might think the grass is greener. No. [01:40:21] Speaker B: If they start thinking that that's because of their pussy is the reason why. No, Nick. No, nigga, it's me. It's me. The reason why is because I took that pussy off the market. Like, if your pussy been in fucking clubs, dolo, for the last 15 years, that's some rundown pussy don't nobody want. [01:40:39] Speaker A: You got a kid, you got a bad job. Everything just starts notching away. But if you're married, none of that shit matters. [01:40:44] Speaker B: None of that shit matters. [01:40:45] Speaker A: No matter where you work, no matter how many kids you got, bro, you. [01:40:47] Speaker B: Could be a stay at home mom. You don't do shit. Yeah, you could not do a motherfucking thing, ring. [01:40:51] Speaker A: That just means that sale still on that pussy, bro. [01:40:55] Speaker B: I think that, thinking back to this, I was just like, the value, right? And again, of a married pussy is priceless. Is priceless. And I think the longer you're married, the more fucking. It's like the quality of diamonds and shit, right? Like, that shit is fucking. The clarity gets better. Like, the fucking. The flaws get fucking more out of it if you're just brand new married. [01:41:19] Speaker A: But you know what, though, Mac? Here's my pushback. This is going to be the unfavorite or the non popular opinion, okay? I think a lot of niggas are lying. [01:41:27] Speaker B: You know? [01:41:27] Speaker A: I say niggas lying. [01:41:28] Speaker B: Oh, yeah? [01:41:29] Speaker A: You talk niggas lying on that day? Yes. They've done studies and that this is scientific. Maybe they're lying, but I don't know why they would. The studies say that average human being has sex with eleven partners in their lifetime. Lifetime. And see, you make which country? America. Average adult human being has sex with eleven partners in their lifetime. [01:41:51] Speaker C: Makes sense. [01:41:52] Speaker A: Niggas be flexing like, man, I get bitches, bro. I had 300 bitches in between. You like Cat Williams reading books. [01:41:58] Speaker B: Hey, hold on. We had niggas on the show, Odub. I don't forget what his number was. [01:42:05] Speaker A: Thousand. [01:42:05] Speaker B: I think it was 1000, right? Yeah, I know that smooth said 300, right? [01:42:10] Speaker A: But what I'm saying though, for Odub, it's a little different. I'm sure he was lying too. But the difference was when we were teenagers, he was a dancer for Luke and the two live crew, right? So if you're a teenager and you're dancing provocatively on stage, you think you're not getting pussy from women at that show every time, right? You're getting pussy every time, right? So it's a lot more possible for him to have 1000. That is for smooth F 300. However, I think the problem though is that I think a lot of people are lying. And because everybody's lying, it's like I'm not going to call him out because then they going to take my number and it's different. And I don't believe that as many people are as promiscuous as we are led to believe. Now, there are some caveats to that. Of course, being in a city like Atlanta would mean your number would be higher. Being in maybe in a lower income environment, your number could be higher. There are a lot of variables. Did you go to college at a party school? Your number could be higher. [01:43:10] Speaker B: Santa Barbara? [01:43:11] Speaker A: Have you ever been a performer or something like that? Or lived in that lifestyle or around that lifestyle, your number may be higher. X facts. So I think that if you really look at this situation as it is, and eleven people being the average. Yeah, there are some pussies that have been ran through, up, down, over, or whatever. But I think the majority of these pussies are eleven dicks, my nigga. And I push back on the idea that we're all out here fucking so much. [01:43:37] Speaker C: Which even makes your married pussy theory even more valuable. [01:43:40] Speaker A: Yeah, it does. [01:43:41] Speaker B: I feel like I don't know. Because again, I think maybe, I don't know where the science came from and maybe when we were growing up, maybe. [01:43:52] Speaker A: Yeah. [01:43:52] Speaker B: But like Prince Reggie said, I think these hoses out here, I want to look it up. Now I think these hoses tossing the pussy away again. [01:43:59] Speaker A: 2000 hose. [01:44:00] Speaker B: Like I'm saying, with the invention of ecstasy, nigga, you fuck eleven niggas in one night shrooms. [01:44:06] Speaker A: And by niggas, you mean people, women too, right? [01:44:08] Speaker B: No, I'm talking about a bitch. Like she'll fuck eleven niggas in one night. You'll let eleven dicks run through you on a triple stack. How old is Dubai, the country? [01:44:22] Speaker A: I went there in the 90s. That was when it first started. Because think about the niggas in Dubai that sends the girls to come. That's a whole new lane of prostitution. That was psychology today. [01:44:32] Speaker B: Okay. [01:44:33] Speaker A: In Casanova's native Italy, the average number of sexual partners is 11.8, while people in the United States have between ten and eleven partners over the course of their life. Psychology today, my nigga. [01:44:42] Speaker B: Nigga. [01:44:42] Speaker A: So you're telling me that your hood stats are going to trump that? [01:44:46] Speaker B: Come on. I'm just telling you they're not taking into the fucking ecstasy, fucking the ecstasy era. [01:44:55] Speaker A: They are, nigga. Hold on. That's why they said average, my nigga. It's not saying everybody only has sex eleven. It's saying that the average number of pussies and dicks only deal with another eleven pussies or dicks in their lifetime because some niggas might marry to high school sweetheart. [01:45:12] Speaker C: Most people are not wild like that. [01:45:14] Speaker A: I don't think that they're out there the way you. But now, if you use the variables, we're talking about Atlanta, Atlanta, entertainment industry, lower income. You know what I'm saying? If you use those variables, then of course the numbers are going to be a little bit different. And I don't know if they've even done a study on that. [01:45:31] Speaker B: Okay. [01:45:32] Speaker A: But what I'm saying is the majority of pussy has only had eleven dicks, will only have eleven dicks in their entire life. [01:45:39] Speaker B: That's not bad. [01:45:40] Speaker C: And going back to your married theory as well, think about it. If a woman's older, the guy is not having sex because the sex drive probably gets down whatever more value. [01:45:49] Speaker B: Oh, they get an argument. [01:45:51] Speaker C: The guy's not doing flowers, making her feel special. You ask a lover boy, say, oh, you look pretty today. The harmless flirting, they say, stop it. But you say, no, girl, you know, I'm really trying to do something to you. [01:46:01] Speaker B: Yeah, there it is. Whoa. [01:46:03] Speaker A: Better? [01:46:04] Speaker C: Yes, thank you. So you add the value of attraction, women not getting treated at home, and then you're applying that pressure. I think out of six out of. [01:46:13] Speaker B: Ten married women might fold. Damn. Six out of ten. [01:46:17] Speaker A: So, Tomma, you're saying six out of ten. If a nigga is having a bad week, not putting it down. [01:46:21] Speaker C: I say bad months. Like, maybe a three six month stretch. [01:46:24] Speaker B: Minimum. In a row? [01:46:26] Speaker C: Yes, dog. [01:46:26] Speaker B: Who do you mean? Every other month? [01:46:28] Speaker A: Doesn't matter. [01:46:30] Speaker B: February, birthday, month? [01:46:32] Speaker A: No, because that Angus thing sometimes helps the drama. [01:46:35] Speaker C: They're a wife saying they haven't had sex in years. Out here, dog. [01:46:38] Speaker A: Yeah. Girls are like, you're choosing celibacy for some reason. I've heard that topic. Like, girls are like, three years, never fuck. I'm like, three years. You chose to do a three year dry spell. I always think it's a lie. [01:46:52] Speaker B: I've always figured this. Right? Like, again, if you go that long without having sex, right? If a motherfucker ain't fucking you. So you're in a relationship, and I'm not even going to get to a year. I'm going to say a month. Okay, a month. I wouldn't necessarily say, because a lot of shit can happen. Busyness. All this other shit could be going on in a month, but I'm going to say two months, maybe three months at the most. Like, if a season then passed and you all ain't fucked, they fucking someone else. Let's be clear. That's my theory, and I'm a standby that I would be willing to bet my life. [01:47:29] Speaker A: Definitely entertaining another nigga they. [01:47:31] Speaker B: Might not fucking, nigga. So again, if you all used to fuck, now, again, if you all ain't never fucked, that's one thing. Like, if they don't fuck, period. But if you all been fucking, and then all of a sudden, it stopped for, like, a three month period, it's only stopped for you all. It ain't stopped for them. Think about it. [01:47:50] Speaker C: They're having conversations like, hey, honey, what's going on? We got to be intimate. I'm talking to moo. Blase, blase. [01:47:57] Speaker B: And social media hasn't changed the game, bro, because again, now a motherfucker just, all they do is post a little workout picture of them fucking walking with their angle or whatever, and now they got a flock of motherfuckers that are on them. [01:48:12] Speaker A: That's why. [01:48:13] Speaker B: Easy work, bro. [01:48:14] Speaker A: That's why I'm saying I feel sorry for the young niggas now, because you're dealing with attention. Attention is your biggest op. It's not even other niggas. [01:48:22] Speaker B: No, it is, right? [01:48:23] Speaker A: It's attention. [01:48:24] Speaker B: It is. [01:48:24] Speaker A: So it's like, that's why I'm glad my girl don't give a fuck about none of that. [01:48:29] Speaker B: No, see, thank God for you, right? Let me give you a pound. [01:48:32] Speaker A: Because my girl, she deleted Instagram. [01:48:35] Speaker B: Because again, I think that's what the problem is, right? I have a theory that you said you have ADHd or Add, right? And I think that there is multiple generations of us that were created intentionally in preparation for what we're dealing with now as far as these cell phones and these fucking distractions and everything else, right? Like that was the trigger, right? These dopamine fucking injectors that we get from these clicks and all these likes and all this other shit that we don't even know why we want to do it and do it, right? Big facts, and it goes back to when I used to be in the medical field, is that I remember understanding that back in the early 2000s, there was a study that came out linking Tylenol with quote unquote ADHD like symptoms, right? Like it was giving kids. Like, if you were a pregnant woman and you took Tylenol while you were pregnant, it's a high probability that your kid would have, and this is all they would admit to was ADHD like symptoms. But to me, it's almost like the same thing with flu symptoms. If you have flu symptoms, negative, you got the flu. I don't understand that. But to me, it's all in preparation for this, right? So these ADHD like symptoms, right? And the reason why, but at the same time, I'll go back just a minute, is that I also remember for multiple generations, that's all that the medical field acknowledged that a pregnant woman could take during pregnancy, as far as any sort of pain relief was Tylenol, right, acetamitophen. And so this is what was approved by the medical industry for generations, that if you are pregnant and you need some sort of pain relief, this is what you need to take. This is the only thing that you can take. You can't take Advil, you can't take aspirin, you can't take any of this other shit. This is the only thing. But then we get to a point where we're like, hey, this might be giving your kids age. Well, then how many people along the line that you've told, this is the only thing that they could take? And they did take. Were their children affected by this? Right. Like, there's generations of us that were exposed to. This is what I'm saying. And so now fast forward to the smartphone era and the social media era, right, and the likes. Right? And it's funny because people are like, they call it a death scroll or whatever the fuck. I mean, these likes and you don't understand why you can't get away from it, why you're so hooked on wanting this clout, right? Like what you will do for likes, right? I saw my fucking get shot in the stomach in a fucking mall fucking food court because he was trying to record some dumb shit for likes, right? Like again, it's all because we get this dopamine release that we didn't even know that we needed because we haven't been diagnosed ADHD or the other. I got diagnosed in my late thirty s and when I got diagnosed I ended up honestly I felt like I was being a champion for this shit because I was not even there for me, I was there for my son. And then when I'm learning about it, I'm like, yo, you sound like you're talking about me, my guy. Like everything you're saying it sounds like you're referring to me. And I asked the doctor who happened to be an ADHD sufferer, but he came from money so he was able to pay for tutors and special everything that medication and he was been on medication, all this shit. He told me and everybody else, he's like, listen, as an ADHD person you're a natural born addict and what that means is it doesn't necessarily mean drugs, but you're going to need something that is going to addict. You're going to find something that gives you that dopamine release and that's going to be something you latch onto because again, it is what gives you what you're not naturally getting without. And we, I think for a lot of people, social media has taken that for them, right? Like again, the attention, like you were saying, french Reggie, that you get by having followers or people liking your post or people liking your pictures or this, that and the other that attention releases that like, oh my gosh, you know what I mean? That dopamine and you're just fucking hooked on that shit and you don't know why. You can't get away from it. You can't stop fucking thirst trapping, right? Because you are thirsty, right? Literally like you are lacking a dopamine and this is what gives you that. And for me, I remember growing up, I was an adrenaline junkie and I didn't even realize it. The way that I lived and the things that I did, all of that shit was an adrenaline rush and I didn't give a fuck. But I know I felt good when I was doing it, I know I liked it. I wanted to do more of it. It just wasn't very healthy and none of it right. It wasn't like I was fucking rock climbing. I was doing other dumb shit, which I don't know how smart rock climbing is either. But it wasn't like I was doing organized fucking adrenaline junk. I was doing fucking street adrenaline junkie shit. And I think a lot of us are still in that phase where we do shit to get that dopamine release and don't understand why. [01:54:09] Speaker A: I'm wondering, though, is that it? Is it dopamine? Or is it you like, you use the word clout and a lot of people use that word, clout. Chasing and clout and all that. I don't know that it's clout, though. I think, honestly, it's validation. And I think nobody's saying, hey, you're somebody. You exist, and I appreciate you. I don't think that supposed to happen in the home, and I don't think people are getting that. So we're calling it clout. And that's a dirty, ugly word that nobody's willing to say, yeah, I'm clout chasing. But I think if we changed it to validation seeking, I think people would open up more to realizing, wait a minute, this is a need I'm trying to fulfill. What's weird for that validation. [01:54:42] Speaker B: What's weird, though, is that I never, and it's. I shouldn't say never, but I really never seeked validation from other people. [01:54:51] Speaker A: That's because our generation didn't give a fuck. We were told if you fall in them and hurt your knee, nigga, get up and keep playing or whatever, and. [01:54:57] Speaker C: No one's recording you falling down, saying. [01:55:00] Speaker B: Even socially, dressing the part, right? I had a fucked up hairline until. I don't even have hairline, exactly. But I had a round hairline until probably the eigth or 9th grade. And I was like, I had a. [01:55:21] Speaker A: Shag to the 9th grade. [01:55:25] Speaker B: I didn't give a fuck about clothes. I had five pair of 501 blue jeans that were. That's it. And they were all blue. [01:55:32] Speaker A: You had the same pair? [01:55:34] Speaker B: They were all five, but they're all the same color, right? [01:55:36] Speaker A: Jobs. [01:55:37] Speaker B: And it wasn't until a bitch called me out and was like, you wearing. [01:55:41] Speaker A: The same pants every day. Exactly. No, I got. These are five pairs, right? [01:55:44] Speaker B: These are different ones. And I was like, yo, I see how people see me, right? Because again, for me being ADHD, I'm very outward scene, right? Inward scene. Wasn't my thing. I didn't really see myself or how other people saw me until they brought it to my attention, and then it was like, oh, wow, that's me again. This is what I'm putting off. And it could be very selfish shit, right where I'm being only thinking about myself, and they're like, oh, you, this, that, and the other. And I was like, oh, I see how that comes off now, but that's not really my intention. But I get it now that someone else is putting their understanding or from their point of view, because my point of view is the only thing I ever really saw from as a young person and shout out to little j Mac because he just had that epiphany, I swear to God, this weekend. And it's made me fucking so proud because it took me having to visit a camp to kind of have that epiphany. [01:56:49] Speaker A: Boy scouts. [01:56:50] Speaker B: No, it was more of an adult camp. [01:56:52] Speaker A: Even better. [01:56:53] Speaker B: Yeah, it was more of an adult camp, but it was, like, definitely got diddled. This is when I had the opportunity to stop and think right and slow down and not just do shit right. I had the actual opportunity to think about what my life was doing or what my actions were, as opposed to just constantly doing and then reacting to what I did and then reacting to that and then reacting to that, and then that just kind of just continues on. And when I stopped, it was like, what the fuck? And I had an epiphany of what I actually had become or what I was doing and how it affected other people. And he had that on his own this weekend, and he came to me on some real shit like, yo, dad, I just want to let you know, I realized I've been spoiled. You know what I mean? I understand that now. You know what I mean? And I may even have been taking you for granted. You know what I mean? I understand that, too. Right? And he went through his whole thought process and how he came to that realization, and I was like, bro, it took me. I mean, I was the same age. I was 19 when it happened to me, but it took me, like, again, going to an adult camp. [01:58:04] Speaker A: So you were seeing everybody around him, and then he was comparing it to his upbringing to realize that, yeah, I can't help but be triggered by this adult camp story that we don't know. [01:58:13] Speaker B: I'm sorry. Okay. [01:58:15] Speaker A: Every time you say, I'm like, adult camp sounds real weird. [01:58:18] Speaker B: It is. It's me not wanting to say jail. [01:58:24] Speaker C: I seem like a Stex resort or something like that. [01:58:26] Speaker B: I don't know why that is an adult. [01:58:29] Speaker A: And just like that, we snapped right back. We good? Go ahead. And I say he definitely got ditto. Yeah, I hope he didn't. [01:58:40] Speaker B: No, I didn't get diddle. Okay. I didn't get diddle because that ditto. [01:58:43] Speaker A: Is. [01:58:45] Speaker B: One of the things they tell you. I wasn't getting punked on the streets. I ain't going to come here and be no punk. Right? Again. [01:58:52] Speaker A: Unless if you do five years. [01:58:54] Speaker B: No, that's an ow rule. And again, I don't know if he's getting punked as much as he will take a punk, he will allow a punk to come into his bunk. That's different. But to me, I wasn't in camp that long, so, yeah, it never got to that point. But, yeah, it was refreshing. And I keep. Ever since then, he's been different. Right? And I mean, like, waking up, doing different shit. [01:59:22] Speaker A: I mean, ever since then is one day. [01:59:24] Speaker B: No, it actually happened. So when I got back from work, when did I get off my. Yes, I got back Thursday. So it's been since Friday. And every morning it's been some real shit. Like he's been up doing shit that he ain't done before and I ain't had to say a fucking word, right? And I'm just like, yo, I get it. Like, something clicked. You got it? And he was like, my friends, they have to go to work and shit, and they complain about how their parents are fucking make them catch ubers, or they complain the whole time, or they take their time and make them late. Whatever the fuck he's like, even when I'm running behind, you'll just jump up and fucking get me to where I got to be. You're there. And I'm like, you know what it is? Honestly, I was listening to a sports talk shit over the weekend, and a dude said his son goes to one of these academies and their mantra is some latin shit, but what it means is action over deeds over words, right? And it's something in Latin, but that's the real meaning of it, is like, what you do over what you say. And I told him, I said, that's how I kind of try to am. I try to be that way. I could talk all a day, right? But I want to show you that I'm fucking here for you, right? Like, I could say whatever, but I'm trying to show you. And now that you're fucking realizing it, you're realizing it now. You can start to see all of the shit, right? You see, not just this. Now you can go back and you can see all the shit where I've been. Deeds over words, right? You know what I mean? And again, that's the kind of nigga I want you to be. [02:01:01] Speaker A: That's what you need to be. [02:01:02] Speaker B: Words don't mean shit without action. You could say, whatever the fuck. [02:01:06] Speaker A: Do you think he would have gotten that lesson or that realization without a dad knowing? No, I don't think so either. And it's not nothing against moms, but I think that that realization for him was more powerful because he was talking to his dad. And he gets a living example on a daily basis. [02:01:26] Speaker B: Yeah. Even today, I'm like, he's like, done that, done this, done that. And I'm like, my nigga, listen. And I made sure to let him know too. Like, bro, listen, these last few days, you being on this shit, like this new shit that you on. Yeah, I'm proud of you. Because again, I get the fact that now you have a greater understanding and you've had what we used to call in corporate that aha moment. [02:01:51] Speaker C: My God, smooth c word. [02:01:54] Speaker B: It's that aha moment, right? Again, if you don't get it for yourself, then you're just being told, right? Like you're just almost slave. Like, right? If someone just tells you what to do, how to do, and you do, okay, great, you can follow instructions. But if you have that understanding of why you're doing when and why and where, you know what I mean? Like, you already know that, then no one really has to tell you moving forward. Because if you understand that part of it, anybody can be a slave. Anybody can fucking be a great slave, right? You know what I mean? Like, fucking wake up, fucking do this, do that, do that. Because again, you don't want to get beat, right? You don't want the fucking the stick. You rather have the carrot. But if you understand and don't need. [02:02:37] Speaker A: The stick, I love Matthew. If you think like. Like, he do good things for me. [02:02:41] Speaker B: Where you think she at? She in the hot still. I don't give a fuck. Django to this day. And fucking Samuel Jackson. That nigga killed that role to me. Samuel Jackson. I don't think he gets enough props for every time I turn on a movie. This niggas damn near props for that. No, this niggas in like 200. [02:03:03] Speaker A: I think he has the most movies. [02:03:05] Speaker B: He has to. He's in fucking everything. [02:03:08] Speaker A: That's really cool, man, that your son got there. [02:03:11] Speaker B: Props to him. I watched unbreakable. Did you see that shit where he's an interrogator. Yeah, where he cut the motherfucking. [02:03:19] Speaker A: We got to go. [02:03:19] Speaker B: Mac. [02:03:20] Speaker A: That nigga. No. I'm really proud of Lil J Mac, though. [02:03:23] Speaker B: Yeah, me, too. [02:03:25] Speaker A: Listeners, we appreciate you guys tuning into another episode of the no nonsense show. Make sure you go out to the website raresonus.com, where you can check out all the shows on the network. Make sure you are following us on our socials at no nonsense show, French Reggie and J Mac have been putting out half bakes every week, so make sure if you care to hear those, join our premium service. You can do that at rare Fm. [02:03:44] Speaker B: It'd be going down. [02:03:45] Speaker A: I know it isn't. It's not rare Fm. It's not. [02:03:48] Speaker B: Man, what is it? [02:03:49] Speaker A: Y'all got me looking stupid out here. It's my fault. But I'm gonna say, y'all, y'all got me out here looking stupid. [02:03:55] Speaker B: It is glow. [02:03:56] Speaker A: Glow FM slash rare. [02:03:59] Speaker B: There it is. Yeah. [02:04:00] Speaker A: That's how you sign up for our premium. Anyway, other than that, serge, we appreciate you dropping by. [02:04:04] Speaker C: Thank you, guys. [02:04:04] Speaker A: You're going to be here next week as well? Of course. It's my man. Okay, so keep supporting us, keep interacting with us, and we'll keep bringing the nonsense because we realize that sometimes people just need to laugh. Till next time, 10% less bullshit than. [02:04:15] Speaker B: Any other podcast, guaranteed.

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