Noadvisory Podcast
Welcome to Charlotte's 4x Award Winning "Noadvisory Podcast" the Number 1 podcast movement in the Queen city! We like to keep it real, local, and with NO FILTER! Make sure to tune in!
Noadvisory Podcast
How A Charlotte Radio Host Turned Late Nights, HBCU Lessons, And Mentorship Into A Movement
The mic was never the plan—it was the door that opened when he showed up every day at 10 a.m. and refused to leave. Our guest, a Charlotte radio mainstay and professor, takes us from graveyard shifts with seven listeners to a classroom where students cut tracks, edit live, and learn the business without the fairy tale. He explains how an HBCU experience, club hosting, and a stubborn sense of self shaped an on-air identity that doesn’t mimic the legends—because it didn’t need to.
We get into the real mechanics of breaking artists in Charlotte: why short tracks rule, how sameness took over, and where quality still wins. He names names, gives flowers, and pulls back the curtain on payola temptations—and the safer, smarter routes through DJs and mix shows. Then we zoom out. Radio’s future looks a lot like podcasting, and he thinks big platforms will buy great shows for programming. Consider this your guide to surviving the transition: own your voice, own your feed, and build receipts.
The room doesn’t shy from heat. We debate the ICE shooting in Minneapolis—fear, flight, and the messy space between authority and trauma. We touch Venezuela, oil leverage, and why history keeps rhyming. For a breath, we detour into Love Cabin chaos, because culture shapes how we see everything else. Words of the Week turns into a pocket toolkit—chthonic, peripatetic, lachesism, nyctophilia—language you can actually use. Triggered closes with therapy-grade clarity on vulnerability: your nervous system, childhood scripts, and why public crying can be validation while private honesty feels like risk. We finish on parenting, boundaries, and the non-negotiable work of protecting kids.
If you love artist development, media strategy, real talk on ethics, and tools for building stronger relationships, this one’s for you. Follow the show, share it with a friend who’s chasing the mic, and drop a review with your favorite takeaway so we can keep bringing you voices that matter.
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It's your most dangerous podcast, and it's your girl Nola Dennis.
SPEAKER_05:And it's your girl Jasmine Like the Flower. And if you don't know, now you know. Y'all was kind of low, but no, but it's okay. It's okay now. Like's always got me. I feel like now you know, nigga. It's your girl Jasmine Like the Flower, the original flower girl. And if you don't know, now you know, nigga. Telling me a beautiful fucking song. I'm telling me if you see you, but I'm here. Y'all don't see me too often, but I'm here. Yo, what's up, freaks and geeks? It's your girl Lex Rated. Bro, come on, swish.
SPEAKER_07:Swish is either this watch nigga more plays in the same.
SPEAKER_05:This nigga late. He's late with his entrance.
SPEAKER_07:Apple count your days. Oh Lord. I'm canceling all my apps. I'm going to Android. Oh my god. Y'all niggas just had me overdraft 150 because y'all want to take out fucking dumbass apps. I don't even know.
SPEAKER_05:Oh, that's what I'm saying. I missed that. Yeah, I don't look at you.
SPEAKER_07:True lying, I will be at the bank in the morning. Yeah, homies.
SPEAKER_05:It's a new year. You're supposed to look at all of that. No, facts. We do have our special guest tonight. Yeah, we got our special guest tonight, but we're gonna get to him later on. We're gonna shout out to Polo. And shout out to our camera man K.
unknown:Okay.
SPEAKER_05:Say what's up. Say what's up. And we're so dead. Well, I mean, you are the dead one. We still used to see y'all hitting the buttons. I was in church. Yeah. Polo. And Polo ain't doing shit. You're supposed to hit the button.
SPEAKER_07:Definitely hit me the soundboard. Y'all know I love you in the soundboard.
SPEAKER_05:No, no. You're definitely not doing it. L to the knall. I'm dead. L to the knoll. Alright, so we're gonna get into this um interview first. Yes. We gotta bring you in the new advisory way. We're gonna ask you three questions. Who you are, where you from, and what the fuck you do.
SPEAKER_00:V101.
SPEAKER_05:Nah, is it on? He knows how to use a mic. I mean, I don't know. He has. You see, he tried to steal my mic. Radio.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah. There we go. Okay. V Notes, uh, V101.9, Power 98. I'm from South Carolina. I'm a country boy, Newbury. Okay, South Carolina. Um, and like I said, I'm a radio personality here in Charlotte. Been servicing Charlotte Airways for about 12 years now.
SPEAKER_05:12 years. And what made you want to start radio?
SPEAKER_00:Man, uh, I didn't. I was a terrible scholar at Johnson C. Smith University. I saw that. Yeah, I was I was horrible. Um too much pussy running around. Oh, it was crazy. And then I was at the club at the time. Um hosting. So it was it was no focus. Oh, yeah. I sat at the studio, I sat at the station every day at 10 o'clock. I go to the station every day at 10 o'clock, and I would just sit there to about two till it was time for me to go to my after school job. And the program director was like, man, what you do? And I was like, nothing. No job, no career, no aspiration, no nothing. And she put me on air. And uh I started off on 2 a.m. and 6 a.m. on Power 98. I did that for about three months, and it was tough. Cause getting up, getting up for work, it was tough. So uh yeah, radio. That's what that's what it's been for the last couple of couple of years.
SPEAKER_02:That's what's up.
SPEAKER_00:That's what's up.
SPEAKER_05:So you said you were a terrible scholar. Can you tell us how it was uh going to an HBCU and how it helped you transition into radio?
SPEAKER_00:Man, first of all, shout out to Johnson C. Smith University. Oh, my cousin went there. Yeah, all the HBCUs. Yeah, shout out to all the HBCUs. Yeah, all the HBCUs. I love them all. Um man, the story is I was a communication major.
SPEAKER_05:Oh, it's always like that.
SPEAKER_00:And I just never applied myself because I was an athlete as well. Oh, okay. Of course I wanted to go to NFC. What sport?
SPEAKER_05:Football?
SPEAKER_00:Football, yeah. Love for you. Wait, who your team? Nah, I was uh I was um a tight end fullback. A tight end fullback. I'm a Broncos fan, as a matter of fact.
SPEAKER_05:So, you know, if any of your body in here ain't no Broncos, nah da nah definitely not that, definitely, no burn pull that.
SPEAKER_00:I don't believe I don't believe women really know sports. No, that's crazy. Hold on now. Y'all come up to these teams.
SPEAKER_05:Hold on now.
SPEAKER_00:Y'all the minute got y'all.
SPEAKER_05:Many of us in here to be coming off like no facts.
SPEAKER_00:Like, this is the question we always ask women who always claim these teams. And and I and I and I put my life on the line if y'all don't know. Who y'all's backup quarterback? Exactly.
SPEAKER_06:So you didn't give me a fucking answer.
SPEAKER_03:I wouldn't admit, yes, a man got me liking the Eagles.
SPEAKER_05:I didn't raise me. That was a long time ago. I know this. That was a long time ago. I always liked football, yes. But the the team specifically, yes. Me personally, I don't like contact sports. I'm a basketball five person because I'll be like, you'll be mad like you'd be like, they'd be like, you know what?
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, these players these days, they don't even need to be touching nobody like that.
SPEAKER_05:So I don't like contact sports.
SPEAKER_00:Okay.
SPEAKER_05:But for me, Miami Heat, because I'm from Miami.
SPEAKER_04:Okay.
SPEAKER_05:That's that.
SPEAKER_04:That's that on that.
SPEAKER_05:Dolphins in Miami. They're not that good.
SPEAKER_04:Definitely not that good.
SPEAKER_05:But um, the last time I was actually at a football game was when Reggie Bush was playing.
SPEAKER_00:Ooh. It's been a while.
SPEAKER_05:It's been quite a while.
SPEAKER_00:I forgot he played for the Dolphins.
SPEAKER_05:I'm waiting for you.
SPEAKER_00:You were you you know sport. It's unalia.
SPEAKER_05:Hold on now, hold on now.
SPEAKER_00:They still ain't said the quarterback in it.
SPEAKER_05:They got those things. No, I don't even, I don't, I don't pay attention to people's names like that. I don't either. I just numbers. I think my team winning, we win it.
SPEAKER_04:Yeah, yeah. Shot up. I know the game of quarterback. Now I'm gonna go look that shit up. No, no, no, I'm gonna go look it up too.
SPEAKER_03:I'm gonna look it up now. I'm looking at no sports. I'm gonna look it up and I'm gonna record it and I'm gonna tag you. Yeah.
SPEAKER_00:It's like that's how I uh that's how I got into it though. Okay. I was at Smith. I didn't have a clue what I wanted to do. Um I did that. Uh I I I didn't apply myself. I I didn't apply myself at all. And it just led me to be in the club and at the radio station. And I taught kids, so I was on like after school programs.
SPEAKER_05:Okay. Okay, you was a uh counselor?
SPEAKER_00:No, I wasn't a counselor, it was just an after-school program at the time. Yeah, we'll get into that though. We'll get into that though.
SPEAKER_05:Will we be outs? Will we? Okay, all right. Uh I know you mentioned that um you were on the uh shift where it was probably like, you know, graveyard shift two to six. Yeah. Um, how did you like you know find your niche in that moment? And did you feel like people started following you during that time, or was it just like in the weeds?
SPEAKER_00:Oh no, it was nobody listening at that time. I know. They showed them who all was listening at that time. It was maybe seven people. It was just it was this truck driver. He was a Muslim, and um, he he would call the station, I I hear you. And he would just say, like, I hear you, or we out here. And I'm like, I don't see nothing, there's no movement. So uh, nah, it was just it was just a couple people, and then later on down the line, we started to uh pick up traction and and and uh and it and it worked out for me. Yeah, and and the way I found my niche was just basically creating my own identity on the radio station. I wasn't trying to be like um my other co-worker, my colleagues, no limit Larry.
SPEAKER_06:Mr. Incognito! Oh my god. I was just I was just it's like butter baby. Right, all of them, all that.
SPEAKER_00:I was just me. I was just me.
SPEAKER_06:Stop my sweet.
SPEAKER_05:Do you gotta catch praise? Yeah, do you? That's it. I let me though. You sound just like someone that is on the radio in my hometown, hot 93.7, holla at me. You sound just like him. Like if I close my eyes, I would think you were him.
SPEAKER_00:Where is that station?
SPEAKER_05:Um, in Connecticut, Connecticut, yeah, yeah. Shout out to Hartford, baby. Always shine. Y'all, y'all know that. Always.
SPEAKER_00:That's what's up.
SPEAKER_05:Um I was about to be notes. My next question. I went to HBCU for two years. I went to Morgan State University. I loved my HBCU.
SPEAKER_00:Shout out to them. What's the blue bears? What is it?
SPEAKER_05:It's just the bears. Yeah, just the bears. Yeah, yeah, blue so bad. Yeah, no. I mean, no, that they they do wear blue and orange, but they ain't got shit to do with the bears. We know um, so my question is, because I I was I was I was creeping on your pages. You you love your school. How do you represent Johnson C. Smith on the radio? Do you bring them out? Do you shout them out? Is it something? Never. Never, never. So you don't want to know that you're vegan.
SPEAKER_03:Not even homecoming.
SPEAKER_00:My students don't know you don't even know who I am. Come on, man. They don't even know me. Why not? Okay, well, go make yourself known. Nah, I don't because uh it's it's up to them to do that research. Um, if if I give them the game all the time, you think they don't know.
SPEAKER_04:No, right.
SPEAKER_00:You think they probably do know a couple of them know who I am. I do have students that be like, what up, B Notes? And it'll be students like, why y'all call them that?
SPEAKER_04:But they call you your last name, Mr.
SPEAKER_00:No.
SPEAKER_04:They call you your first name.
SPEAKER_00:B Notes. And my students be like, Why do y'all call him that? And I'd be like, Professor Green, that's what you can call him.
SPEAKER_04:That's what I'm saying. So Professor Green is what they call your name.
SPEAKER_00:So, but they they really don't they don't know who I am. And it's and it's okay because when they do the research and they find out, they go home and tell their moms and listen to me. So that's what it is.
SPEAKER_05:I I mean I asked specifically because when you go to HBCU, you represent. Like you put on for your school. It don't look like you putting on.
SPEAKER_00:I I do put on, but it's in different ways. Okay, period. It's it's just different. Um, I I don't have to go out uh shouting it out and being boastful. It'll it'll show in my actions and the things that I do in my everyday life. Because I also have younger kids that I mentor, so I have to also protect them as well. So I just kind of be myself.
SPEAKER_05:Is it like a mentorship program?
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, I do. I have a free mentorship program. I don't charge a dime to mentor single parents' kids.
SPEAKER_04:Single parent here.
SPEAKER_00:Single parents.
SPEAKER_07:So I assume it's a lot of single moms that nah it's both, it's mixed.
SPEAKER_00:It's mixed. Hold on. I'm not gonna say it on this. I'm just I'm just trying to understand it, because you know, I might mentor somebody. It's it's it's whoever is whoever needs it. But I get a lot of single moms and I get single dads who who need help as well. But you know, men are not gonna be I need your help, brother. Yeah, yeah, yeah. The woman will. For sure. But if they together, I'm not mentoring your child because y'all gotta work that out. Y'all gotta work that out.
SPEAKER_05:I feel you're gonna be able to do that. That's the only structure. Y'all should keep it getting household.
SPEAKER_00:Unless they need counseling, then uh be resourceful. Okay. But nah, if you got mother and father in the home, you talk to your mother and your father inside at home. That's for sure. That's for sure.
SPEAKER_07:Alright, you're gonna be able to do that.
SPEAKER_05:So I also major in communications and I'm about to graduate in April. Whoa! So unlike unlike you and my uh co-host, she okay, I don't I didn't go to a HBCU, I didn't get to have that experience. I go to a PWI. That's okay. Oh, FIU to be exact. I'm like Panthers, which was the sec okay, so we're the top college in Florida two years in a row.
SPEAKER_06:Okay, top it.
SPEAKER_05:Even though so I didn't get to have that experience. So when you were choosing to major in communications, like what was like your push for that? Because for me, I chose that because I'm great with speaking with people, but I also have a degree in psychology. So I was like, I wanted to speak with people and I wanted to get to know people because I was already knowing what's in your head. So I might as well like learn to speak. So like what was your my story?
SPEAKER_00:Has nothing to do with no attribute that I have. I failed calculus three times.
SPEAKER_05:And you figure you wasn't good at me either. That's why I chose psychology.
SPEAKER_00:I failed liberal studies twice.
SPEAKER_05:Oh my god.
SPEAKER_00:So my advisor was like, hey, you gotta find something. I was either gonna be. Communication is like third to last. It was education, yeah, interdisciplinary studies.
SPEAKER_05:Yeah, that's true, and then communication.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah. I say, let me do communication. I get to be around music all day because I was a music guy. I also get to be around other musicians and other artists, and I already understood how to uh edit music, and I was I was already into that. So I was like, you know, let me let me uh do this and try to get some good grades. And 3.0 came that following semester. Oh, that's right. Yeah. And then after that, it just got it just got better, and and and from there I just kind of took off. But it wasn't because I had it, I had no skills in communication. I did not know what I wanted to do, but I found my way. What's your sign?
SPEAKER_03:Oh, I like Aries. I like Aries, though.
SPEAKER_05:I like Aries. See that? But y'all mean this head up. That's why I don't know about to say that. That's why we've been at it since he got here. Because they've been going at it. Here, Aries. But it's all love.
SPEAKER_00:April 11th, Aries.
SPEAKER_05:April 11th. Oh, Lord, the April's all crazy. Y'all gonna be at it now. I do. But speaking of music, yeah. Do you um it's my bad. Do you think that Charlotte's music culture changed since you started radio?
SPEAKER_00:Has it changed? Yes, it's changed a lot. I remember when I first started in a block, in a block of music, we'll probably get about five, four or five songs. Because songs were about four minutes, five minutes long. Now we can put in 15 songs because these rappers is rapping for a minute and 45 seconds. Um the quality of music, I I wouldn't I I say it would change, but that's because of the culture has changed. So uh with that being said, that's the only reason why the music scene has changed because uh a lot of different perceptions about the music culture. A lot of these young kids done took it and ran with it. Every everything's almost sound the same, you know. But uh it is what it is. So I mean that's nothing we can change. Music is always gonna change, but what it's gonna change into next, we never know.
SPEAKER_07:Who's your top five artists in Charlotte right now?
SPEAKER_00:Top five artists in Charlotte right now. Um, my guy Rich Dunk. Uh, been knowing Rich Dunk for a while. Okay. Uh he's cool. Uh Rich is cool. Uh, some old heads like uh Keen Carter, who was rapping when I came up, Revenue, um uh Three, uh, of course, the baby. A lot of the older, a lot of the older guys who who are here in the music scene and even working with in the studio with other artists like Fantasia and being in the studio with other people. Man, it's it's been a it's been a journey uh being a part of a lot of different artists. But uh I think those guys that I came up with are are like my tops.
SPEAKER_07:Are you familiar with Taliban?
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, I'm familiar with Taliban. Young, young, young boy. He's up and coming. Yeah, okay. I haven't heard a lot of his music, but I have I've seen some snippets of some stuff, but he's definitely uh up and coming as well. Putting the groundwork in, like putting the footwork in for each other. He's um he's kind of following in that same uh footstep that the baby did, putting in that foot, that groundwork earlier in the game and then blowing up. His time is coming, though. For sure. His time is coming.
SPEAKER_05:What's one artist that is overrated in Charlotte?
SPEAKER_00:One artist in Charlotte that is overrated. Man, I would have to say don't bite that tongue.
SPEAKER_07:That's a real no advisory question.
SPEAKER_00:An overrated artist in Charlotte. I have to think about it.
SPEAKER_03:Nah, you that doesn't even matter.
SPEAKER_00:No, I have to think about it. It's it's a it's a we're gonna come back to it. Yeah, come here. Let me think about it. Okay, so what's we definitely already heard about it?
SPEAKER_05:Just in general.
SPEAKER_00:The most underrated artist is um there's this kid named Elijah the Young Prophet. I heard of it. Um and I, I wrote some songs for him. We actually flew to Manhattan and uh did a song with uh Styles Pete from the Locks. Okay, that'll lie. Yeah, man. The song was on. I was so honored to sing on that track because you know, I wrote the song, it was a good track. We shot the video, it was on MTV, and I remember in B E T. I would just remember watching Bodak Yellow, and then our video came on right after. It's tough. And it and it was so dope. But he's just a he's such a young, dope artist. He's a a New York representative, but he has that, he has that Charlotte. It's like Charlotte is coming out of him. So he's combining both of those two artists to rap, and he he's such a dope artist, but very, very underrated. I love that.
SPEAKER_05:Yeah, because my I like like I hate to say it, but I like real rap, man. Like you have to have something to say in a poetic way, and you gotta be writing your own shit. Like, it's nothing wrong with high, it's nothing wrong with having someone write for you. But I think like it just if it comes from within, it just is more relatable. Absolutely. Yeah, it just hit. Absolutely.
SPEAKER_00:Especially when it's especially when these young artists can rap and it's understood, yeah. Right. And they're not talking about all the other stuff. Because I hear a lot, I get a lot of songs. Y'all know I get a lot of emails in music all the time, and I'm like, it's cool, but it's this you. I always like, it's this you, it's just you, it's just you. I can honestly say that whatever Elijah raps about is 100% him. Yeah, I love that.
SPEAKER_07:So that like, um, have you you said you get a lot of emails. Have you ever gotten one? You'd be like, yeah, I think I could break this artist.
SPEAKER_00:Man, it's been a lot of it's been a lot of uh artists that had it, but it's either their time management is not good. It's always that small entity that they just couldn't really get over the hunt with, or they need to master their tracks, or they need to go back and record it. It's been uh it's been a lot of those, but I do get a lot of artists that turn some stuff in and be like, oh, this is dope. You need to you need to work with that. Work that out. It's it's it's it's one uh it's one girl, her name is uh Fly Knee and uh Dope Rapper. And I'll say I've been listening to this song, she released this song back in 2019. I listen to the song like every day. Wow. And it's dope. She's a dope rapper too.
SPEAKER_05:Shout out to you, girl. Right, you threw in there that you write B notes. Yeah, yeah. Slid it right in there.
SPEAKER_00:I tell my students all the time there is no other RB artist in Charlotte or the surrounding areas that can top me on the on vocals, on performance. Oh, you're gonna say put together an hour set. I don't there's nobody in Charlotte or North Carolina that can that can come close to uh testing me on that stage. Like it's it's it's gonna be tough. But I do write. I do write. And the reason why I'm getting back into this music bag because I have so many students who like, oh, we want to see you do it, because they they don't believe nothing. If it's not on TikTok, they don't believe a damn thing you're saying. So I have to I have to do all of my work. Nothing is nothing is okay. I'm gonna bring up this from last year. Nah, it's we're gonna edit this song in class, and I have all the kids pull their music up. Okay, we're gonna edit this person's song today. So them kids, they're like very standoffers. They're like, nah, I'm nervous. I'm like, nah, we you don't want to be an artist if this is how you feel about your music. So everything I have to put out, I have to show them that I can do it and that I've done it so they can believe me, so they can emulate it. But yes, I'm a I'm a writer, man. Right.
SPEAKER_07:What class is this though?
SPEAKER_00:Because you said you got students, so what class is man? I teach, I teach uh right, I'm a professor. That's that's the crazy part. I go to I go to class like this, and they're like, excuse me, where's the professor? I know that's right. You know, so um I teach audio production, uh, media writing, media literacy, uh, broadcast operations, uh public speaking, and reporting. At Johnson C. Smith and CPCC. Okay.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah.
SPEAKER_08:Ain't nothing like a college student trying to beat that 1150. Right, right. Right.
SPEAKER_05:No, yeah. That 1150. I moved it. I moved it. So was it?
SPEAKER_00:Mine's 1130.
SPEAKER_05:Oh, oh hell no, I ain't come to your class.
SPEAKER_00:I moved mine. They get so accustomed to that 1159. I'm like, nah, 1130. 1130.
SPEAKER_04:Right there. Oh no, no, sorry. It's a caterer. Oh, yeah. Shout out to Shamar.
SPEAKER_06:Shout out to the caterer. Shea Ma who gave us some food.
SPEAKER_07:I'm thinking he was the cook. I thought we was interviewing the Caterers today.
SPEAKER_03:Now y'all know why he was late. He's nothing.
SPEAKER_05:Y'all were in a group. This nigga got us on super mute.
SPEAKER_07:We done interviewed caterers before. You didn't mean that they can't do a cook for us.
SPEAKER_03:I'm like, oh we got another. It's a double wind event. Beat Noes everything. This nigga.
SPEAKER_05:My bad. I fuck too soon. My bad, my bad.
SPEAKER_07:The nigga do radio, he he RB, he babysit, he watch dogs, he do animal things.
SPEAKER_00:We don't take that. Because there's two women on this pot that can't cook.
SPEAKER_06:I didn't say the food. The statistic is a good thing.
SPEAKER_05:All my food is on my Instagram. You gotta be a little bit more. She might cook.
SPEAKER_07:This is the second time you don't try to do it. That's what you say. I don't four y'all.
SPEAKER_05:Two of y'all, it's okay though. Yeah. I cook. I don't have nothing to do. If it don't up, I let it come here. That's the one.
SPEAKER_00:I was like, I do the whole part. Come here. I ain't gonna come here and not talk about it. Oh no. So did you look at mine?
SPEAKER_05:I didn't. You didn't? I didn't. I'm from New Orleans. You gotta look at mine's. We can cook. You you probably can cook. I know probably I can.
SPEAKER_00:I cook more people at this table. That's discrimination.
SPEAKER_05:Self-included. That is discrimination. Self-included in right now. Enough is enough.
SPEAKER_07:You gotta make my boy a meal, man. You gonna have to make it. You gotta come back. You gotta come back.
SPEAKER_05:We all have to like swap plates. Let me see if that hard judge. Yeah.
SPEAKER_00:What's your go-to dish?
SPEAKER_05:My go-to rare beans and rice. What? Rare beans and rice. With the with the um cornbread, honey cornbread and fried chicken. And you know a lot of people can't cook rice. Red beans. No, no, no. Let me get this right. Let me get it right. Homemade. From scratch. I like red beans and rice. Not the lot. Anything with beans and meat, that fiber.
SPEAKER_04:My go-to, everything. But no, I do make um really good meatloaf with cabbage. I make rice, homemade cornbread. Okay. Like starchy type of shit. But I anything.
SPEAKER_05:But anything, everything I cook is good. Don't nobody be complaining. Okay. Here's the thing, here's the thing, it's a thing, here's a thing, isn't it? So for okay, so for a long time, right? Uh-huh. So for real, for for real. I don't cook for real. So it's no joint. She was what? It's not.
SPEAKER_06:I was just like, who you cook about me? Like, I'm gonna cook about it.
unknown:Everything, yeah.
SPEAKER_07:You can't say anything. We would say everything that we can't.
SPEAKER_05:I can't just pick one thing because I don't cook one thing over and over and over again. What did you make that when you ate it? Everybody always wants you to make. When you made it and you took it out, I put my pussy juice in your face. I would have to nobody my corn beef and cabbage. You think cabbage? I need more mac. Okay. My macaroni is busting too. That's my favorite. That's not because I brought a whole thing of macaroni and she stole. She stole the whole thing. What was this?
SPEAKER_00:Is it is it crock pop back?
SPEAKER_05:It's bake Mac. It's gone Mac.
SPEAKER_00:My favorite. I need to see what that cheese is in for.
SPEAKER_05:Who the fuck is making crock? TikTok peoples. The TikTok folks. Speaking of TikTok, yo, listen, I don't even own a crocodile, yo. A lot of people that do a lot with their crock pocket. B notes be on there talking his shit about the cartoons and the superheroes and shit. I just want to point out that Batman is not a superhero.
SPEAKER_07:What? What is wrong with you?
SPEAKER_05:He's there's nothing super about him. What the fuck is he then? I want to know who your favorite superhero is. That's all I'm saying. What is Batman? Well, my my favorite is Loki like a villain. I like Loki.
SPEAKER_00:Okay.
SPEAKER_05:I don't, I don't have like I don't like the superheroes because I feel like they do too much. I like Loki. And I like him because, you know, he be out here fucking shit up. But he's also very smart and he comes in when people need him. I I the only reason why I don't feel like Batman is a superhero is because if he did not have his money, he wouldn't have shit to contribute.
SPEAKER_00:No, negative. Come on. What are we talking about right now? Negative.
SPEAKER_05:If you don't do superheroes, what can he contribute? I don't mind. And buying his stuff. No, he's not.
SPEAKER_07:I'm not gonna take it away from Batman. He is the smartest superhero alive. I I think with Batman had his powers.
SPEAKER_00:If he had powers, I think with preparation, I think Batman can possibly beat Loki.
SPEAKER_05:No, yeah. I give it that because he he might out. He might he might outsmart, but when I'm power. I'm talking about super though. That's the super. I'm crying. So now since we're on the subject though, I do have a question. I'm gonna get my question out before I respond to start this part. Pardon me. Um I wanted to know. Smoking doesn't bother you, does it?
SPEAKER_04:This is no advisory because we might get high in here.
SPEAKER_05:But um I wanted to know, do you get like, you know, like groupies, like you know, people just hitting you up for the opportunities and stuff? Like I have to ask, because you're a very handsome guy, you know what I mean? So they're probably like knocking down that though. They're like, can't wait for the radio, let me see what I can get, or whatever. Like, so tell I want to know some of those stories, or what's the craziest thing someone has hit you with in the inbox or whatever. Yeah, because you had Queen Najia on there.
SPEAKER_07:She didn't. Queen Naj. Yeah, Queen Najia? Queen Naja. I mean, fine. She's fine. Yeah, I love that. Oh, fine. Let us know. She's all right. She's dead.
SPEAKER_00:She's a better talk to.
SPEAKER_10:She's a Libra.
SPEAKER_00:I do, but I'm I'm very Southern charm. I'm very respectful of women. So when they do approach me in that manner, it's it's a easy, it's like, oh man, you know, that's cool, man, but you know me keep it professional. I always keep it professional. Now you know you lie. You can't I'm um you know the stories that you hear. Yeah, sit in line, sit in line. Especially nowadays. It's crazy.
SPEAKER_07:It's crazy that you gotta be smooth.
SPEAKER_00:It's so it's so wild. But when I when I first got there, it was crazy because uh I think Stash House was up under us at the radio station. So I would do radio breaks. I would run down to Stash House, bring them up to the station. Once they see the station, it's ball game.
SPEAKER_06:They ready to fat draws and what you do tomorrow, baby daddy?
SPEAKER_05:Hey, yo.
SPEAKER_07:Right break my record and break my back. That's what they say.
SPEAKER_05:Sometimes it ain't even about them doing music. They just want to get close to people they think you're close to. You know what I'm saying? Like, and I'm sure Charlotte is a I'm so sorry, I love y'all so much. Y'all, I love y'all, but there are some women out there that's just it'd be like, damn, what the fuck? I'm not from me. I ain't from here. I am from here. You gotta say some of the people. I is from here. Yeah, I think it's a mixing pot of people, so just in general, like the BBL culture is real. Oh, yeah. Yeah lightly.
SPEAKER_00:I'll hear it. Charlotte? Yeah, it doesn't belong to Charlotte. It don't belong to Charlotte. But it's a mixing pot of people. So I can't say it's from the Charlatan. I haven't seen them.
SPEAKER_05:Just in general. I haven't seen a lot of BBLs. Oh, yes. I bought 10, I'm waitressing. I see them every day. At the airport.
SPEAKER_07:Oh, yeah, definitely at the airport. I done seen like a couple. They're definitely at the airport. Definitely. The ones that don't smell, the BBLs that don't smell. Y'all come.
SPEAKER_05:Not an expiration data.
SPEAKER_03:I done heard it.
SPEAKER_05:Like you bring up shit.
SPEAKER_07:I agree with you, though. I've never had a BBC. I never saw the BBL. It was three years ago. Two BBLs I dealt with. It was an accident. One time.
SPEAKER_05:It was an accident. How do you get a BBL by accident? Damn.
SPEAKER_04:I forgot. I wasn't getting on you, friend.
SPEAKER_05:You know I love you, girl. I didn't even know. It's an expiration day. You gotta get on them herbs, bro. The immune system, your red blood cells, your white blood cells fighting with each other, they think it's a disease.
SPEAKER_08:You gotta get on your herbs. Yeah, but she's not wrong.
SPEAKER_05:Yeah.
SPEAKER_00:So y'all wouldn't y'all win get a y'all win a TV or done anything? Hell no. No? No.
SPEAKER_05:The close that I'm getting is the uh breast lift and uh tummy tuck. I'm not doing none of that. That's close as working out. Working out. And I'm I'm afraid that it just basically. I don't even want to gain weight. I don't want to be put to see. Yeah. Yeah, that's what really be killed about. Yeah, I really work out and the results are amazing. So it's like to me, like if they can put it up to the big thing.
SPEAKER_00:I've I've seen the one with a BBL at the gym and it didn't look like that. Oh, no. I mean the legs was little, it was crazy. That's crazy.
SPEAKER_05:You know they say they be looking like the ants from Bug Life. Yeah, that's what they be looking like the ants from Bug Life.
SPEAKER_07:The Asian dog, the Asian doll, bob.
SPEAKER_05:That's crazy, yeah. You know, she had her baby as home. You know, she got it. I still knock it down, too.
SPEAKER_07:Don't give it twisted Asian. I'm not getting it. Bro, it took her forever to be. Yeah.
SPEAKER_05:Like part of it before. Is it? Right, right. That's what I'm saying to you, though. Alright, so no advisory. It is, it is. We get tired, right? We do. So what is your dream collab for your radio?
SPEAKER_00:My dream collab, you know what's funny? Um I don't, I don't I'm not the type of person that look forward to dream collabs. I live in the moment. If it happens, it happens. I don't we I really don't look forward to it because I live in I I live in the moment so much. And the things that I do, like I said, is it's not for me, but it's just to show my mentees, um, my students that it is possible that you can do it. But if it comes along, it it comes along. So I really don't even think about it like that. I just live that life. That's it.
SPEAKER_07:So you said you had power 98 and you have V. V101.9. V19 Which one is better? Which one you feel like?
SPEAKER_00:Man, I'm so blessed. Um I was I was pushing to do power 98 because of the culture for the longest. Sure, for sure. Uh it's a bigger signal. Power 97 of North Carolina. Right. I was like, man, I'ma I'ma go, I'ma go to power, I'm gonna be, I'm gonna stay at power like Larry for 36 years. And um it it took somebody, uh, shout out to Artie, the One Woman Party, who was on radio a long time ago. She was like, You be great on V. And at the time, I'm like 27. I'm like, nah, I don't wanna be on V. Oh, folks, nah, I'm good. And uh finally Incog put me on V and was like, you gonna stay on V. And I was like, I hated it at the at the time. Yeah, yeah. But I'm blessed and so fortunate because you know they let a lot of great people go. They let uh Danny Diaz go, Tone X go. I remember Tone X. He came from school, I was a third grade. Oh my god. But they let all these people go and I'm still standing. Is uh the DV with the dark still there? Yeah, JDD. Okay, okay. Yeah, JD's there. JD comes on first and then I come on after half. Shout out to JD, man. Yeah, JD's my girl. Um, but I I'm fortunate to be in this position because of me staying at V101.9. And now I can I can see myself being on V101.9 for the next 20, 30 years. And is that the one with Ricky Smiley in him? Nah, Ricky Smiley is on uh the block. The block and uh the bread. Yeah, they all they're all on the block. We got we have uh Steve Harvey Morning Show. Yeah, we got Steve Harvey Morning's show.
SPEAKER_05:And you know uh Top Dog Law, right? Top Dog Law Is that shit real?
SPEAKER_07:Top I'm gonna cross my car.
SPEAKER_06:That can't be you, they ain't you. I just nah I just do it impressions. You told him that was. You asked me and I couldn't confirm or deny. Nah, I'm not sure.
SPEAKER_00:First of all, shout out to Lucky. Lucky hates me for that. Why do you hate you? I do his impressions. Uh and then I'm in his club. I have to host at Infinity, and I'm doing his impressions on air. He don't come holler at me or nothing. He don't what's up, beat notes or nothing. He he don't you don't get down with me.
SPEAKER_05:I wanna I wanna meet lucky. I wanna have it.
SPEAKER_00:That's lucky, man. But I do I do do an impression of him, and every chance I get I do his impression. Do it right now. Top dog law. Top dog get you top dollars.
SPEAKER_06:Yeah, okay. I thought it was him. I threw it.
SPEAKER_03:No, right, right. I always wanted infinity because of him. I get tired of him.
SPEAKER_05:No, but he be killing it though. I be really wanting to go because of him.
SPEAKER_00:Killing it, man. He's in so many markets. He's in markets in New Jersey, he's in Florida, he's in California, he's everywhere. He's dope, man. Shout out to the sponsor.
SPEAKER_07:Because Top Dog Log gotta be dropping a bag for them to get shout out like this. I use Top Dog have to be dropping a bag.
SPEAKER_00:And they use a lot of uh Top Dog use a lot of uh independent uh personalities to push their brand too. So they got a lot of people. So it's dope. Shout out to them.
SPEAKER_07:I'm about to crash my car just to see how good these niggas do. Don't do that. Don't do it.
SPEAKER_06:And then he's gonna say it on that. It's a good look.
SPEAKER_05:As good as they say they is. It's a good as they are. No, nope. They're gonna be like, oh, he did that shit on purpose. We ain't gonna get him done.
SPEAKER_03:We ain't gonna get him now.
SPEAKER_05:We ain't work with him. That's crazy. But can you give some tips to for the people that would like to get into radio? Yeah.
SPEAKER_00:For sure. Uh what it what y'all are doing is the is the future of radio. Radio is radio is important. Radio is dope, but this podcast uh industry is gonna take over because there are gonna be a lot of platforms that's gonna want to buy y'all in a couple years. I give about five more years. Y'all are gonna be hearing from iHeart, uh, TuneIn. All these people are gonna wanna buy these different podcasts because they need programming. And the only way to beat radio is through dope, um, dope podcasts like what you guys have and programming. And once it booms in the next five, seven years, uh, you're really gonna see everybody doing a podcast. Yeah, my god. My grandmother wanna do it. So, you know. My grandmother wanna do it. She just got an Amazon account and like she just think it's free. So she just be on Amazon all day putting stuff in the cart. And I'm looking at the cart, it's like$30,000.
SPEAKER_03:Hey, yo, that's my card.
SPEAKER_00:She wants all of you. So she's new to the social media thing. So, but uh somebody who wants to get in radio start. This is this is this is it right here. This is the this is the way uh showing people your voice and uh your personality on on podcasts. We started doing podcasts back in 20 uh 11. And we was like, oh, this is whack. We don't want to do this. This ain't going nowhere. I mean, biggest, probably one of the biggest mistakes I've ever ever ever made. It's not you could win somewhere. No, we we definitely about to start podcasting more. Um I do a community show on all the radio stations on Saturdays. So uh we're definitely gonna start doing more of it though. But y'all are already, y'all, y'all are ahead of the game. So what y'all doing?
SPEAKER_05:So what you're saying is you fuck with no advisory. Oh, yeah, most of the time. Yeah, y'all have to have cars. I do have a question. So if I don't listen to the radio often, like you know, I'm not in a car, driving, and stuff like that, where else can we find the same content? Like, do you guys have an app?
SPEAKER_00:Oh yeah, yeah. We have a uh app on your iTunes, your Google Play Store. I say this every time I leave the radio at six o'clock every day. Uh app, website, streaming, and and for y'all as well, utilize all of those different platforms to make you guys reachable on all levels.
SPEAKER_04:We on everything, right, Swish?
SPEAKER_00:Everything. Yeah, that's all you need. But yeah, we have an app you can stream, stream from the website, stream live, all that other good stuff.
SPEAKER_07:Are y'all are how do y'all deal with interns at the radio station? Like, can a nigga just pull up, just sit down? Like how you said you were just in that motherfucker sitting at two clock.
SPEAKER_00:It was crazy. Um with interns, they they do want somebody who was in school already. Makes sense. They do want somebody in school. I just I just took advantage of it because um I knew QCB at the time who does Fox Sport Charlotte Radio. Okay. So that actually at 10 o'clock, I was waiting on him to get there. He'll get there at like 12. So I'll just be sitting there and they're like, oh, who you waiting on? Oh, I'm waiting on Q. So uh that's how I was able to sneak around there. But do people do come up to the radio station and we'll if we see him, we'll bring him up, talk to him, sit down and chop it up with him. Yeah, that's dope. I ain't too I ain't too big time for it.
SPEAKER_05:Don't have too much pride, y'all. So y'all not gonna kick nobody out for still listening?
unknown:Nah.
SPEAKER_05:Okay. I'm we're gonna go. Who what you try to sell? I mean, no, that's yourself. You selling yourself. That's the listening.
SPEAKER_07:So you're about to post about sound limiting.
SPEAKER_05:No, no. You feel me? I wanna, you know. Give me my shot. Right.
SPEAKER_00:There is a guy in Charlotte. I I don't know Buddy's name, but he does look like me. He got brown eyes. He looks just like me. I can't even think of Buddy's name. He would go around the clubs, like, oh, I'm the host, I'm B Notes. Oh man. So I'm I ran into a bouncer. I ran into a bouncer. He was like, Man, you killed it last night.
SPEAKER_06:I was in the club. What are you talking about? Yeah.
SPEAKER_00:What I killed last night. We got his picture behind the desk at the radio station. So the people at the reception desk can look at him and be like, nah, we got you, bro. I cannot take a money.
SPEAKER_05:What is his name? I don't know his name, but I done seen somebody that look just like you. And I was like, he looked like that one.
SPEAKER_00:He's my size and everything. But he got brown eyes like Eric Sterman. That's right. You got a document.
SPEAKER_05:But you mentioned that you guys have an app. So can you tell them, you know, where they can find you at? He said Apple is like him. Him.
SPEAKER_00:Oh, I'm on the app as well. Beat Notes. Uh as soon as you as soon as you jump online, we have our own Dropbox. And I'm working on my own website so I can be uh official as well, so I can start posting my own content. Because it's it's good if you can uh market yourself and have your own website so you can put all of your stuff there. It's like your uh your digital resume. Yes, yes. So but I'm definitely on that. I'm I'm on that website as well.
SPEAKER_05:Yes, y'all have that digital website, y'all. Digital website, go on. I gotta ask this. Switch.
SPEAKER_07:What do you feel? Oh, we gotta wrap it up. Okay, this is my last question. This is my last question.
SPEAKER_05:Okay, hurry up.
SPEAKER_07:Nino What do you feel about all the Payola shit going on at Power 98 with Ebro gone? All of this, like you are in radio, they are one of the biggest, you know, historically hip-hop radio personalities and things like that. So how do you feel about that personally?
SPEAKER_00:When that happened, we immediately had about five trainers on payola. It's such a it's such a radio scene, but it's a sin, it's like one of those scenes where you like, oh, that ain't the big of a sin. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Until it catch up to you. And then religious people say, Well, all sins are. No, they not. Because if if I murder you, God would be like, Man, you you murdered him, you gotta go to hell. But if I steal something, God was like, What was it, nigga?
unknown:What you take?
SPEAKER_06:How much was it?
SPEAKER_00:You know what? Shit like that. Go ahead and do it. But man, it's one of those things. And every time it happens in different markets, we always have a training about it because they want people to know what payola. Y'all know what payola is.
SPEAKER_05:Payola, I haven't heard of it. But yes, you just heard the mask.
SPEAKER_00:Payola is when when people pay to get their records on air, or it happens. Bye bye. But um, but you know, I'm a I I blind eye it because whatever the consequence is for that person is whatever the consequence is. We did have a uh uh a program director that get fired for payola, and I mean it ain't small change.
SPEAKER_07:It's like a thin line because you say you can't you can't charge for it, but then you hear executives and people in higher energy be like, it costs a hundred thousand to break a record. Yeah. So what like what the fuck?
SPEAKER_00:I saw that I saw that article too.
SPEAKER_07:That was uh I seen that a lot.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah. Um the money is split up in a couple different ways. You got the money that goes towards the distribution, money that goes towards the AR, the record label, uh, the radio company. It doesn't necessarily payola means when it goes directly in the pockets of some. Okay, okay, type shit, type shit. Man, it's been so many times. I've I've seen it. I've seen guys screenshot me a uh um a cash app. It was like, hey, go$2,000 if you can put this in. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And it's so tempting because it's like it's right. Yeah, like$2,000? And I want a PlayStation 5 too. Damn, I want some, but it's it's it's it's a tough situation, but it's just something we don't get involved in because it's your livelihood.
SPEAKER_04:So what's the proper way to do it? I know I said we're gonna do it.
SPEAKER_05:Oh, so we tell you why. We definitely what's the right way to do it, man?
SPEAKER_00:So what we tell people uh all the time, you know, send it to the DJs. You know, uh shout out to Butterfingers, man. Butterfinger's one of the things. It's like it's it's like Butterbaby. Man, Butterfinger's one of the dopest people, man, with one of the greatest hearts. He allows artists to come up to the station, talk to us, mix shows, put their songs in mixed shows, and and so much other. It's ways around it, but artists have to do their research. You just can't come up there and bully your record on like Maino or somebody like that.
SPEAKER_02:New York.
SPEAKER_06:Yeah, man. That's crazy.
SPEAKER_00:That was my first interview. You know, I heard about it.
SPEAKER_06:I've never heard him on the radio ever. Love you.
SPEAKER_00:You ever heard Maino? I mean, I know who he's a song. I love it. That's his most popular. He does radio now. He's on a podcast with uh Angelina. Yeah, let's rap about it. He on let's rap about his own.
SPEAKER_05:Didn't 50 Cent say they didn't pay any rent?
SPEAKER_00:Is it is that what it's called? I feel like 50 Cent said they wouldn't be able to do that. Let's rap about a podcast with that fabulous. Mm-hmm beefing right now. So yeah. Why would you beef with 50 cents?
SPEAKER_05:Let's move on because we can't do the cancer. You can't be their cancer. Y'all be emotional though. Just go ahead and emotionally sane in some instances. When you're gonna be able to do it. His birthday before my birthday. Her birthday is after my birthday. You not really fucking with us. You feel me? Trouble. Okay. Y'all both cancers? Trouble. Yes. Oh Lord. All right. So shout out to Beanos for coming on the show with us. Yeah. He's gonna get top dog law for us.
SPEAKER_04:Top dog law.
SPEAKER_05:I'm gonna tell him to come to the podcast. I wanna hear him. Talk in his voice the whole podcast. No, his name is Lucky.
SPEAKER_03:His name is Lucky. I just call him the dog. I just call him Todd Dog Law.
SPEAKER_00:If you call him the top dog, he'll be hype about that.
SPEAKER_03:We're gonna call him Todd Dog Law.
SPEAKER_00:No, right, right.
SPEAKER_05:Is he talking like that all the time?
SPEAKER_00:He does.
SPEAKER_05:We're gonna make him talk like that the whole show if he comes on.
SPEAKER_00:He talks like when he talking to you, he talks loud. What up, Charlie? How you doing?
SPEAKER_05:No, I gotta, I gotta record the whole time.
SPEAKER_00:Lucky, dude. This is how I this is how I know we got a time. This is how I met Lucky. Lucky used to do um Lucky used to do commercials for Onyx. Oh yeah, yeah. He would say he would say shit like this. I told my daughter, that's the one. You know you say T H with the D. She said, Diane, I wanna go with you. I gotta and I was like, you gotta strip club commercial. And she was like five and six at the time. Now she's like 22 or something like that. That's crazy. So uh wild. I'm gonna use lucky. You do.
SPEAKER_05:That's crazy. Uh sure. Yeah, you gonna stay home. You have to stay on the wheel. You gotta get it you got you got shit to do. You got shit to do. We ain't gonna be that long. You got mentors and mentees and listen, I told her I am in a relationship, by the way.
SPEAKER_00:Oh, I told you.
SPEAKER_05:Did nobody ask you that?
SPEAKER_00:Sure. Yeah, I'm in a relationship.
SPEAKER_06:I'm sorry, y'all.
unknown:I'm the only one that's not being there.
SPEAKER_00:I was telling her how to single point. No, no, I was saying I was telling her I had to leave because I had to go home and lesson point to get ready for that.
SPEAKER_05:Okay, got it. Got it. Oh, that's the we love a routine. Okay, that's the lesson loving routine. That's crazy. I'm in love with something.
SPEAKER_00:So this is what I want y'all to do though, if y'all don't mind. Yeah, I want y'all to bring no advisory to Johnson C. Smith.
SPEAKER_03:Oh, what? We definitely said nothing.
SPEAKER_05:We got a click right there.
SPEAKER_00:I got the same exact setup.
SPEAKER_05:We just can't smoke in that bitch, but it's like no, that's dope. We would definitely love it. We love we love HBC.
SPEAKER_00:Get my bachelor's degree one way or another.
SPEAKER_05:Come on, honorary.
SPEAKER_08:Y'all don't y'all gotta get switched to honorary degree.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, that's something. They giving out honorary doctors to a lot of people.
SPEAKER_05:I need one. Hey, yo.
SPEAKER_06:It'll save me a lot of money.
SPEAKER_00:I can't wait till I get mine. I'm just I'm just waiting to get by.
SPEAKER_07:Hey, yo. That's crazy.
SPEAKER_05:Yes. Well thank you. So you're not saying the kick it with us. No. No, he okay.
SPEAKER_07:He got shit to do, man. Shout out to Steve. Shout out to your team, man.
SPEAKER_05:Thank you. You gonna leave me hanging? No, I appreciate y'all, man. You wanna get this picture right with the blessing? Uh huh. Yes. Picture? Oh yeah. I do. Yeah, we're gonna get a picture. Who takes it?
SPEAKER_07:We will be back after this brief intermission.
SPEAKER_05:Hey, we are back. We are back. We are back. Shout out to Sha. Shout out to She Moi. Catered to us today. Gave us some food. It was busting, y'all. We ate some Haitian food. So make sure y'all go book with them. Book with them. They got a brunch menu now. So make sure y'all brunt y'all book with them and get with the brunch menu. Alright. Let's get started. I'm reserved right now. And we all we got the bounce breakdown with me, Nola Desk. And we're about to get into the birthdays. So happy heavily birthday to Elvis Presley.
SPEAKER_07:Fuck that nigga. Oh my god. What the fuck are we talking about? Dead homies. Dead homies, nigga.
SPEAKER_06:What he do to you? Dead homies. What he do to you?
SPEAKER_07:Fuck that nigga. He stole from my ancestors. Yeah, he did. He did. You feel me? All the hits he had took from my people. I take it back. God the little rich, man. I take it back. Happy happy birthday.
SPEAKER_03:He said what he said. He said that he said what he said. I'll take it back. I'll take it back. Alright.
SPEAKER_07:CEO wouldn't know if I did it. CEO, I did that for CEO. He probably don't even know. Nah. No.
SPEAKER_03:No. Everybody knows.
SPEAKER_07:He knew it didn't know before that.
SPEAKER_10:Not too much.
SPEAKER_07:He knew it was before everybody. I know. That's my name. Not too much on the age. That's my boy.
unknown:Damn.
SPEAKER_03:Alright, but also happy birthday to Cynthia.
SPEAKER_05:I think I say her name. That's Alphaba from Wicked.
SPEAKER_03:Oh! Okay.
SPEAKER_05:Yeah, she turned 38.
SPEAKER_07:The one that got what's Arianna hostage.
SPEAKER_04:Yeah. Pretty big. The one that got Arianna sedated.
SPEAKER_05:Yeah, facts. Facts. Yeah.
SPEAKER_03:I'm scared for Arianna right now.
SPEAKER_05:Um I like Alphaba though. I like Alphaba. She was herself. She's emotionally attached to Ariana Garner. She is. She must have went to Sunday.
SPEAKER_07:She acted like she drunk her uh her period.
SPEAKER_04:Oh. Oh, yeah. Spaghetti.
SPEAKER_05:Put it in spaghetti. Hey, yo, that was crazy. Then we got Noah Cyrus. That's Molly Cyrus' sister, if y'all don't know that. Okay, yeah.
SPEAKER_03:Y'all was looking like 25.
SPEAKER_05:She turned 25. Oh, wow.
SPEAKER_07:I never knew she had a sister. That's crazy.
SPEAKER_03:You never knew Molly Sarah led a sister?
SPEAKER_07:Never knew she had a sister.
SPEAKER_05:I think she does, does she?
unknown:I don't know.
SPEAKER_07:That's crazy. She did say.
SPEAKER_05:You know Molly Cyrus do not fuck with Billy. Yeah, she doesn't. Not at all. She don't fuck with that. After he had a Matana, she stopped fucking with that nigga. And she should. I don't know what happened between them. They're beefing. They've been beefing for years. She has not been talking to that man.
SPEAKER_07:Mm-mm. But he still doing music. She had a black boyfriend he probably ain't let her fuck with. Nah, shit like that. She started coming out doing all the black shit. I think he'll like wearing the Jordans, doing the extra shit.
SPEAKER_05:He actually did a song with um, what's his name? Nas. Yep. That don't mean nothing though. He he don't like playing people niggas. That don't mean nothing though. He don't. Alright, so then we got Ryan Destiny. If y'all don't know her, from Star. Yeah, from Star. Alice, don't want that play Alice on Star. She just got engaged. Yeah, she did it the wheelchair guy.
SPEAKER_07:She's cute. She's cute. I like her.
SPEAKER_05:Yeah, that's my favorite. I love her.
SPEAKER_07:Yeah, yeah. She turned 30.
SPEAKER_03:Oh, wow.
SPEAKER_05:Then we got um an RB singer, Cash Page.
SPEAKER_03:Oh, I love Cash Page. I do too. Look at us. We love the same shit. She said love songs.
SPEAKER_05:Love songs. Love songs. And she sings options too. What?
SPEAKER_04:Go get on her cash with a K. Guess what, y'all?
SPEAKER_05:That's a type of. She's 24.
SPEAKER_04:She looked like she loved the case. I thought we was like the same age or a little older than she was a wife. But she has been talking about like just being in the industry where it has, you know, it's drained her and stuff like that. Oh, yeah. I know what you're talking about.
SPEAKER_07:I know what you're talking about. I just seen that. I just seen that.
unknown:Yeah.
SPEAKER_04:But her music is.
SPEAKER_07:I swear to God, I just seen her on my tongue. She fell out with a streamer not too long ago. I forgot what streamer it was. I don't know.
SPEAKER_05:She's looking a little crazy.
SPEAKER_07:I know you're talking about.
SPEAKER_05:Alright, let's go to these bounce breakdown. We got an ice agent take the life of a monapolis woman. Y'all heard about that? Y'all seen that?
SPEAKER_04:Yeah.
SPEAKER_05:You didn't see that. Was it justified? Okay. We were about to get to it. Alright, so rest in peace to Renee Nicole Good. She was 37 and a U.S. citizen who was shot and killed by an act an ice agent in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on January 7th. So this just happened yesterday. She was a mother of three, a poet, and had just recently moved to the area. And why is she outside beefing with ice? So look, look, they probably just went up to her car. So there's a video online that shows mass federal agents approaching her SUV parked across the street. One agent is seen shouting and then firing multiple shots at close range, striking Renee. Witness said that there was she posed no threats to the agents, and they just was trying to tell her to get out of the car. Federal officials have stated that the agent fired in self-defense and alleging that Renee's vehicle was used as a weapon against officers. Yeah. Sources are saying she tried to run over a car. She tried to run away. Yeah. But not run anyone over. Because I mean, we don't know that. She ain't It was a video. No, it wasn't we I'm saying we don't know her intention. Yeah. I think I think it was I think she was trying to get away. She looked like she was trying to get away. Like she was parked there for a minute, and then they started walking up to her car. And it was like, you know, get out the car, get out the car. And she just drove off, and when she drove off, she got shot and she crashed into another car.
SPEAKER_07:I'm driving off too. Announce yourself. And then she's a U.S.
SPEAKER_05:citizen at that, so she don't have to stop.
SPEAKER_07:Announce yourself, motherfucker.
SPEAKER_05:Wait, but if she was driving off, why would they just like they drove off because they thought that she was, she didn't, they didn't know that she was a U.S. citizen. And then, you know, they thought the car, you know, they thought she was gonna hit them with the car. So he just was shooting. Yeah, they're getting paid. Her family finna get a paid off of that.
SPEAKER_07:I hope they win that lawsuit.
SPEAKER_05:I don't know. They don't say that part. They don't say that.
SPEAKER_07:For real. Take ice away. No, for real. Hell no.
SPEAKER_05:So what y'all out, y'all ramp? Hell no. Don't take no ice away. Take them niggas away. So this way. This is what the mayor said. Let me tell you what the mayor said. So the mayor said on live camera to the ice agents. He said, get the fuck out of Minapolis. Oh my God. Because yeah, they are protesting now because of this. And then Donald Trump is not making it no better because he issued a public statement defending the ICE agent and emphasizing his belief that Renee acted violently and described her as very disorderly and claimed she ran over the ICE officer, portraying the agent's actions as self-defense.
SPEAKER_07:I'm not gonna lie, bro. These old niggas is robots, bro.
SPEAKER_05:But I mean, but I hate I hate to ride defense and be devil's advocate, but he ain't lying, y'all. If they are government official people and they are asking you to show fucking identification, why are you not showing identification? If you're a US citizen and you know you're a U.S. citizen, here's my motherfucking proof. I'ma go on about my business. Ignoring them, not responding to them, and then trying to drive off and claiming I was just trying to get away, but there's a cop in the way. Like we, we, like we gotta call a spade a spade. I get it. People don't deserve to lose their lives, but at the end of the day, we can't keep breaking laws and expecting nobody to do shit. Like these people, at the end of the day, have to go home to their families as well. They're regular fucking people and they have a job to do. If you're not allowing them to do their job, what the fuck did you expect to happen? Maybe she was scared though. Because she was a U.S. citizen. Right. And you going after that. Everybody always say, Do your job better. You come to me with my your guns out. Yeah, I'm not abiding by shit. I'm always fighting. They had their guns out. It's not like they were approaching her like, hey, we just want to talk. We know that. Somebody got it. And it's like they don't be asking. That goes back to us being black people. If somebody approaches me five cops and I feel like my life and my safety is at risk, yeah, sometimes it is more like, damn, what should I really do? Abide by what they're saying or figure out if I'm about to live. Do you know how many black people have been taken down by cops and now it's the Mexicans? So maybe she felt in that moment, it is a fight. You got your gun out to me. It's not like you're just approaching me like, hey, we want to see your papers.
SPEAKER_04:Yeah, because they don't be asking that. They just be like, get out the car. I'm trying to get away. I'm not trying to run you over. I'm trying to get the fuck away. Like, I don't want my life to be gone.
SPEAKER_05:So I just feel like you're doing your job a little bit too motherfucking hard. I don't know, because she still lost her life.
SPEAKER_04:And that's very, very unfortunate. That is very unfortunate. And that's probably why she ran away because a single day, and that does not, it's not justified.
SPEAKER_07:Defund ice.
SPEAKER_04:We definitely get them out of here.
SPEAKER_05:Get him out of here. But do y'all think that she d um deserves justice? I think everybody that loses their life, she didn't get justified yet for your answer. It just happened yesterday. But I just I just know it's not gonna happen because that like you driving a vehicle trying to hit somebody, that's literally a crime. I don't think she's gonna get justified because of the city. I think she was trying, it looked like she was trying to get away. Don't nobody know. We don't know her intentions because she's no longer here. So it it don't matter what we think it looks like. It ain't what matters what the people that are there. You feel me? And that's why I was like, I hate to be the devil's advocate, but at the end of the day, you gotta understand the situations that you're in, the people that you're around, and be able to maneuver around those situations so you can go home at the end of the day. True. True. Alright, speaking of Trump, he kidnapped the president of Venezuela. Sure fucking did. I ain't hear nothing about it. Like, how the fuck do you wake up? Period. Ain't no way you ain't hear nothing about this. Period! I've been homesick for the last two weeks. I've been working and getting away. That's not your president. Nah, I'm just that's your president. Cause he got that man. This man was walking around with like he was like he was running the whole drug business from South America. Like important, important. He what did he say? Trump had a yeah, he said he was like oh top of so it's not even two weeks into January, and Trump is on bullshit already. On January 3rd, United States forces conducted airstrikes and a military operation in Venezuela, targeting Caracas and key military sites. They also captured President Nicholas Maduro and his wife Celia Flores and transported them to the United States to face federal charges, including narco-terrorism and drug trafficking, leaving Vice President Delcey Rodriguez. Rodriguez. Rodriguez is the easiest Rodriguez. Now y'all know. Now Jesus is easy. But y'all know I can't pronounce you. Don't do that. Don't do that.
SPEAKER_07:Accountability. I love it. Keep going.
SPEAKER_05:Alright, so the United Nations Security Council in many countries have condemned the United States action as violating international law. Columbia President Gustavo Petrol stated for Trump, come get me. I am waiting for you here. Now y'all know Trump is gonna go get that man. Because once you called for Trump, he's gonna come. He liked the boogeyman. Exactly. And in some states, they have been protesting going on to stop the war, and some states have actually turned in supporting Trump's plan. Which Trump's plan is to take Venezuela's oil. Due to Venezuela's vast oil reserves and Trump's publicly emphasizing the United States oil interests. It's like Bush and the Iraqi people all over again. The Bush family, when they was going over there, uh see, I'm talking about too much. But uh way back when, when we was in elementary school and shit, Bush was beefing with the Iraqis over some oil and we went to war with them niggas. That's what happened. And they said it was because of, you know. I don't think it's because of oil. That's what that's saying. That's what it started. We're not talking about Bush Jr. We talking about his daddy, the first Bush president. Not him. His daddy. His daddy started that shit over some point. Hey, yo. Alright.
SPEAKER_07:They're saying something about it's another country that Venezuela, it's a country we beefing with that Venezuela started getting cool with. That's what Trump is mad at. Like, you cool with my ops. I'm not fucking with that. Cut them niggas off. Or we coming for you, twin.
SPEAKER_03:The nigga way.
SPEAKER_05:Yeah. And he went to go kidnip the motherfucker. Smash them folks up and shut all the airlines down. It was like, can't nobody fly.
SPEAKER_07:He's a robot though. I don't think him or Joe Biden, I think they died up on time.
SPEAKER_05:Trump is a robot?
SPEAKER_07:I really think these niggas is just skin over metal.
SPEAKER_05:Yeah.
unknown:Okay.
SPEAKER_07:All right.
SPEAKER_03:So do y'all think Trump really cares for other countries and and their civilians, or he's just doing it for people to see that he is helping people but really tearing them down.
SPEAKER_05:Trump only cares about America. I do not care about it. I don't even think he cares about America. He only does himself. He does Trump is running this country like it's his business. AI is running the shit. He only cares about America. Now you might be right. AI might be running the shit, but that's the thing. That's crazy. They come to get us next. I think he only cares about himself. Definitely cares about himself. He don't care about himself. Yeah, he don't care about us. Damn sure don't care about us. Us, but he might care about America. And like people though. We probably be walking in the White House and he see he would just be like, these fucking niggas are still. I do that. Out here in these streets, I gotta get them out of here. I gotta get everybody out here. I just want these whites in here. I do that. I do these things. So I mean, I don't mean how I do that. I do. I be upset with all people. I'll be like, God damn, these goddamn niggas is always up. But the same shit I go for every race. I don't give a fuck. Like we saw stuff back in the day, pictures and videos with him with rapper. Yeah, he sees our value. I think he wanna beat us. He sees the value with us. Yeah, we we work hard. He wanna get rid of the mental agreement with that, though. I think that he likes us as a people because he sees maybe that's what he wants in himself, and he's just like, hey, fuck, they dope as fuck. We are. We thank you. We appreciate it. We are all right. Let's get into love. Orange ass nigga. He did that, but hey, yo. Let's get into love. Y'all heard about Love Cabin? Y'all watch that? Nah, hell.
SPEAKER_04:Hey, watch that. I do not watch Love Cabin. Never heard of it. I'm so sorry. I've been watching every other thing, but not.
SPEAKER_05:How the fuck you don't watch and you watch baddies? You watch baddies?
SPEAKER_07:Oh yeah, I'm tuning in. I'm tuning in. I'm tuning in.
SPEAKER_05:You tuning in? Okay, we're gonna talk about it. We're gonna talk about it.
SPEAKER_07:I'm tuning in.
SPEAKER_05:You watch baddies, nigga. That's my boy. Who's your favorite? What is it?
SPEAKER_07:Who's my favorite? I like summer right now. She's the underdog.
SPEAKER_05:Summer.
SPEAKER_07:Right now, I love summer.
SPEAKER_05:Summer?
SPEAKER_07:I love summer right now. I ain't gonna be there.
SPEAKER_05:Summer? She's annoying as a big thing.
SPEAKER_07:She beat up Tosiki, but nobody wants to talk about that.
SPEAKER_05:No, she did not. No, she did not. No, she did not. She got in the middle, but she did not beat her.
SPEAKER_07:Tasiki was emergency and Tasiki. Tasiki seen her swing back and she wasn't scared. Tatziki was like, oh shit. Hold on. Nah, she was.
SPEAKER_05:Tusekee didn't really get her how she wanted to get it.
SPEAKER_07:DC her scared. She was like, oh, yeah. She was too in the wild. She wasn't swinging.
SPEAKER_05:If somebody was like a beat her fight, then I can understand. Cause that was a little bit. Marsh wasn't backing down. March the fight. Like I ain't even gonna be back. She backed up. She got swung on the ground a couple times, but she didn't get her ass whooped. Marsh. Marsh is crushing. She's friendly. She the one that looked like a whoop. A Muppet, yeah. She's a map. That was the first one. But did you see the second one? Yeah, she looked like a Muppet. She looked like a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of that one. We're gonna go back to Love Cabin. Love Cabin. We're back in love, not fighting. We're love, we're loving, not fighting. Love over fighting.
SPEAKER_02:Not fighting.
SPEAKER_05:Alright, so there's a new dating show on Zeus called Love Cabin. It's hosted by Ray J and narrated narrated by Untie Tia Camp. And I call it the great version of Love Island. Untie is narrating? Yeah. You gotta watch it. It's so funny because it's definitely ghetto. It's definitely ghetto.
SPEAKER_07:That's why I call it the great value version. It's scripted or when it's real.
SPEAKER_05:When enough is enough. Nah, that shit is scripted. After how Ray J acted, that shit is scripted. No, Ray J acts like that all the time.
SPEAKER_07:But I feel like throughout throughout the scripted shit, it'd be a lot of real shit happening. They like, oh shit.
SPEAKER_05:Like But Love Cabin is very chaotic, messy, and not all about love. And it's mainly Ray J's fault. Because the way he hosts the show was basically like, let me just tell him, just told him to just do his show how he wanted and he ran with it. He be doing the most. So it has been surfaced that he is dating one of the contestants outside of the show, which is Sheila. She is known as the Kim Kardashian Great Value. And there are also three couples left in the show. I do, I love it.
SPEAKER_07:How did you say that? It all correlates because him and Kim had the sex tape, and she does that nigga might have a type. Or he could just know that's what the fans want to see. So he's just like, yeah, I'm gonna make her the front girl.
SPEAKER_03:Nah, shh, nah, they they not together on show.
SPEAKER_07:I know they're not. I know they're not.
SPEAKER_03:That's outside the show. She a contestant.
SPEAKER_05:No, no more though. But there's only three couples that were received, the 100 in K. Michael and Desi, Trappieo and Brie, and Kia R and Ice. Now, who do y'all think? Well, y'all don't watch it, but who do you think go with? The two girls. The two girls. The two little names. I thought you said two girls' names. Oh, sorry. What's this?
SPEAKER_07:Ice is a boy. The skinny black girl with the short hair. Desi. Her nigga might her nigga might get that. That's who I'm going with. Let's see. They seem like the realest.
SPEAKER_05:Like, it's definitely the realest. It's definitely the realest. Okay, now let's get into another love, another love. But this is toxic. Alright, so a Texas woman burns down 13 apartments along with her boyfriend clothes. Okay, LeF I. Hey um. You know she toxic.
unknown:Okay.
SPEAKER_05:She toxic. Alright, so on Monday, January 5th, early morning, at the South Lake Village apartments in Sheldon, Texas, a domestic dispute turned into a massive apartment fire when a woman, Crystal D. Randall, burned her boyfriend clothes in a barbecue pit and her balcony and flames grew bigger. Crystal stated she tried putting out the fire, but they spread into the building's attic and walls damaged 13 apartment units through fires, smoke, water, and some roofs collapsing. All residents were evacuated safely, but one firefighter was injured during a later flay up and taken to the hospital in stable condition. Crystal was charged with reckless arson and taken to the hospital for unknown reasons, but it is still being investigated.
SPEAKER_07:Reckless arson. Lock that bitch up, throw away the fucking keys.
SPEAKER_05:Nah, because it's not that serious, y'all.
SPEAKER_07:You mentally unstable fucker. What is wrong with you?
SPEAKER_05:Because why? Hey, yo. You could at least sit it in the grass. Like, goddamn. Who the hell starts fires on a patio? On a patio. She probably was on the third floor, too.
SPEAKER_04:If my house burnt down because of that bitch, I would have whooped her ass. Oh my god, lock the nigga up too. Early morning. Early morning. Early morning, like five in the morning.
SPEAKER_07:Because he needs he he need to be locked up and even dealing with a crazy bitch like that.
SPEAKER_03:Yo. Why are you pissing her off?
SPEAKER_07:Lock them both up. Throw away the key. Fuck them both. I don't like that.
unknown:I know.
SPEAKER_07:What happened? What we do?
SPEAKER_05:Nothing. Alright, this is my last one. Girl talk. I just play. Alright, so this is the last one. Charlotte's going up this weekend, y'all. Did y'all see the the football game?
SPEAKER_04:Yeah.
SPEAKER_05:The Panthers is going to the playoffs.
SPEAKER_04:Oh, I didn't see that.
SPEAKER_05:Shout out to the shout out. They're going to the playoffs. We don't really care about them though. Well, I don't I don't care about them. I live here now and they I'm just do. So I might go tailgate. They got tailgate. I want to colours. I'm gonna go to the house. Yo, they're gonna be in the back of your pickup truck. Fuck up. Here we turned up.
SPEAKER_07:Because I'm a nigga that don't watch football, but I remember 2004 when Jake Delone was the quarterback and time's up.
SPEAKER_06:I did it out. We done. Nothing. What's going on? Alright, we're gonna get into the words of the week.
SPEAKER_07:I feel smarter already. Come on, ready to take my line. What? What are we doing?
unknown:I don't know.
SPEAKER_08:Huh?
SPEAKER_07:I like this jacket too. Is that North? Oh lord. Yeah. Love it. See, I didn't keep the whole thing.
SPEAKER_05:I'm gonna get it from Hot Topics. Alright, welcome back, y'all. To Words of the Week, the segment where we dress our vocabulary in silk and we give it some spice. We talk deep, we think wild, get comfy because class is in session. This is no advisory.
SPEAKER_07:I feel smart already.
SPEAKER_03:Smart already. I feel like Eddie Murphy.
SPEAKER_05:I'm sorry. I didn't mean to laugh like that. That was like a real genuine laugh. It came from the I'm so sorry. My bad swish. The first word we're gonna discuss today is thonic. And thonic is an adjective. It seems toxic. It does seem a little bit toxic. And I know in your head you're thinking thonic is just simple, but it's not. It's spelled C-H T H O N I C. So although it's pronounced thonic, it starts with the C.
SPEAKER_03:Sound iconic.
SPEAKER_05:C-H-C-H-O-N-I-C. And it's an adjective.
SPEAKER_07:It sounds like a woman who profusely uses her vibrator. Like she uses it all the time. Oh, she uses it all the time. She overly uses it.
SPEAKER_04:So she what she thonic?
SPEAKER_07:You're a thonic.
SPEAKER_05:Overly rated.
SPEAKER_07:It's like being a thought, but with yourself.
SPEAKER_05:With yourself. Okay, you heard my problem. And then what's the word sound like? I mean, it's an adjective. Um, let's give um Nai a mic.
unknown:Oh no.
SPEAKER_05:We gotta have the. Yeah, you gotta, you gotta. Alright, we gotta um insert from the audience. What do you think it means?
SPEAKER_01:Or so is it like around the words like chaotic or like chaos itself? Nope.
SPEAKER_04:So this word is a Greek word and it comes from the word thon, but it's also spelled K-H T H O N.
SPEAKER_05:And it's meaning earth or underworld.
SPEAKER_04:I was gonna say out. It refers to like primal or subterranean forces.
unknown:Okay.
SPEAKER_03:What?
SPEAKER_04:That's a whole nother thing.
SPEAKER_03:You gotta explain. Nah, you do gotta explain it.
SPEAKER_04:You definitely do gotta explain it.
SPEAKER_03:Okay, use it in a sentence.
SPEAKER_05:The word is meaning earth or underworld. So it's coming from like subterranean. So meaning like under the earth, the subterranean.
SPEAKER_04:So those forces, yeah, like the ozone, the what do they call it? The mantle, the quarter, like the draw, draws. Y'all going y'all go? I said underworld. Oh, oh, oh. The underworld.
SPEAKER_05:So this meaning is of the underworld. It means deep, dark, earthy, or primal. So if I was to use this in a sentence, I would say the bass was so thonic, it felt like a rose, like it rose straight up from the earth's core. Well, I like that. You said rose? The bass. The bass. The rose.
SPEAKER_09:What'd it do?
SPEAKER_05:Y'all, I'm talking about music. What y'all talking about? Are we talking about music?
SPEAKER_04:The bass was so sonic, it felt like it rose straight up from the earth's core.
SPEAKER_05:Like it just came from the feet of you ever you just play that. It could be house music. Y'all thinking about nasty shit. And I'm trying to make everything sounds like that. They heard a rolls and they just they heard rolls. And then he said thought and vibrators. Nah, we're not going there. Niggas. It really is, though.
SPEAKER_07:You just so seductive.
SPEAKER_05:Where's your mic? Right. He don't need no mic. Definitely don't need no mic. Because he, what is he talking about? That was coming back. I'm gonna take a shot, y'all. But yes, Thonic. Make sure you remember it's spelled with the C. C-H T H O N I C. H T H H C H H T T H O N N I C. And it's pronounced.
SPEAKER_04:That was the first word.
SPEAKER_05:Thonic. Yo. So the next word. The next word is peripotetic. Peripotetic. Peripatetic. And it's spelled P-E-R-I-P-A T-E-T-I-C. Peripatetic. And it's an adjective. It comes from the Greek word peripotetikos, meaning given to walk around. Okay. So peri equals is around. And then patine is to walk. Does anyone want to take any guesses on what means? Walk with grace? That was actually. Yes, of course. Slea's over there distracting my pretty friend. Uh-uh. Okay. Peripatetic. Pyropatetic is spelled P-E-R-I-P-A-T-E-T-I-C. And it's an adjective, and it is derived from the Greek word pirapotekos, meaning given to walk around.
unknown:Okay.
SPEAKER_07:You gotta stop giving us Spanish words. You gotta use English words.
SPEAKER_05:That sounds like a limb. It sounds like a limb. Okay. It's meant to walk around. Given to walk around is what parapeticos means. Yeah, it's a Greek word. But basically, this word means traveling from place to place.
SPEAKER_04:So I would say her peripatetic lifestyle got her move. Oh, sorry, her peripatetic lifestyle got her knowing airport codes better than people's birth dates.
SPEAKER_05:So you know, you just always moving and shaking, always going somewhere else. You hitting up here, there, everywhere. That's me. That is you. Traveling from place to place. We go into Mario next month. So who comes in? Uh the third word that we're gonna talk about today is lachism. Lakeism. And it's spelled L-A-C-H-E-S-I-S-M.
SPEAKER_09:It got something to do with the body.
SPEAKER_05:The body? It's a noun. Person, place or thing. You heard a person, place, or a thing. So it's laikism. And it's basically derived from a Greek word Laikisis, meaning it's one of the three fates assigning destiny. So this word is tied to fate, chance, or a dramatic turn in life. A coincidence. Okay. Oh yeah.
SPEAKER_07:An epiphany in a sense. A eureka moment.
SPEAKER_05:What was that? Like a eureka moment. Yeah, I agree. I would say like a eureka moment. Yeah, it's just like everything just came to fruition. Like, you know. Um, so the meaning for this word is the desire to be struck by disaster, but not in a dark way, but craving intensity or change. So it's just really that strong feeling where you know, like everything's gonna change now, like left, right, center. Which way am I going? You know. Um, I would use this sentence to say, when life gets too quiet, my lakeism starts acting up. Like, okay, universe, shake things up a little bit.
SPEAKER_04:And that's how I ended up here in Charlotte. Okay, okay.
SPEAKER_07:If you say that somebody who don't know the definition, that's gonna sound crazy, my lakeism. Lakeism.
SPEAKER_05:My lake of them. They're gonna think so much a lake. They're gonna be like, huh? Yo, lake is shaking. And I have one more word for us today. Quiet on the set! Quiet on the set.
SPEAKER_07:Lakeism just sounded crazy.
SPEAKER_05:Lakeism. This last word is nyctophilia. Nyctophilia.
SPEAKER_03:Nyctophilia.
SPEAKER_05:And it's N-Y C T O P H I L I A. And it's a noun. Now Nicta. That's me. That's you.
SPEAKER_07:That's me. I know that. That's when you just can't help but be a nigga. Like, you know, it's like you can take the hood. You can take the nigga out the hood, but you can't take the hood out the nigga.
unknown:I see why you say that.
SPEAKER_05:I got nic to pickia. I got the house. She said Philia. She never said. Nick tophilia. He was using his context clues. I see why he said that. I'm crying. Okay. Yo. So Nicked is night. Philia is love or affection. So this meaning is the love of night or darkness. So yeah, I like the darkness. Nyctophilia. So I would say it's not insomnia. It's nyctophilia. The night just gets me.
SPEAKER_07:Everything just result back to black. Like nigga, nickel, the night dark.
SPEAKER_05:The night just gets me, like it understands me. Like it's just quiet. You know that we need to decompress at the end of the night like that. There's nothing else to talk about. I am an night owl, and I don't know if it was just from this job, but I'm starting to learn that like the nighttime is my quiet, peaceful time.
SPEAKER_07:But do you like looking into darkness though? Like if you're in your house and you just look up, do you like like looking into darkness? Or do that like disturb you?
SPEAKER_05:Like the light to hold. No, right, like someone looking at me.
SPEAKER_04:I have my daughter's little light. So I'm a night light girly, or like the stove top half together. Yeah, I mean, so there's gotta be like that.
SPEAKER_07:Like, see, I'll be falling asleep. But not the TV. I don't know. My daughter room door stays open. So I just, if she's not there, I'm just I just wake up just looking at the darkness. I'd be like, this is kind of all right.
SPEAKER_05:Well, that's your vocabulary upgrade for the week. Make sure you guys uh tune in, stay smart. Uh then everyone else at brunch. And I'll see you next week. Woo! All right, y'all. You already know what's time. What's time it is? What time it is? What time it is. It's time to get triggered. It's your girl X-rated. We got the trigger people's champ. Period. I'm in here talking for y'all, speaking for y'all, and teaching y'all shit. Yes. My homie not here today, so we we we're gonna keep all the debates and the arguments to the minimum. We're gonna get through it.
SPEAKER_07:I don't wanna, I don't I know what the time is is of the essence right now. I just wanted to give you a flowers on your segment because the the homie that was right there and my best friend, they they really felt touched by your segment last year. I just wanted you to know your shit really is like when you say it people feel that shit. It's seat.
SPEAKER_05:So like I'm in therapy, all those I swear to God.
SPEAKER_07:Yeah, you're a therapist. Do your thing. I'm gonna say shit up.
SPEAKER_05:I gotta say, stuff that not. I'm not registered yet, can't get paid for, but I got y'all. So y'all already know what January was about. January is intimacy, vulnerability, and fear. This month we are not talking about your flaws. We're talking about embracing it and understanding why closeness can feel uncomfortable, and it can be something that's comforting as well. If that makes sense. And I'm going to explain why. So, um, first I want to talk about vulnerability. So, vulnerability doesn't feel like connection at first, um, it feels like exposure, life exposure. Uh so your body reads vulnerability as danger before it kind of understands the closeness of it. So, if being honest makes your chest tight, that doesn't make you weak. Uh, that that's your nervous system talking to you. So, earlier we were talking about fight or flight when we were talking about that lady running over people. So, it it's not about why you're broken, it's your body's natural reaction to what's going on around you. It's about why opening up feels unsafe for many people. Because essentially, and I'll get into it, we all have instant. Where you experience something and you said, Dang, if this happens again, I'm not gonna make that same mistake. So then you're walking through life with fear, kind of like proactively trying to prevent things from happening or giving too much to a situation. So that vulnerability or that that lack of vulnerability is what keep is what's keeping you from real intimacy and real connections. Okay. So I'm gonna move forward. What vulnerability actually feels like. So remember last month when I was talking about id ego and superego, vulnerability threatens the ego. So your ego's job is to protect your identity and to protect your self-esteem. Vulnerability threatens that 110% because it's pretty much putting your true self forward. You got to drop that mask down that you put in forward in front of everybody. Because I I mean I can only speak for myself, but we all I said we all, but we we all got masks that we put on in front of people. The way you act in front of certain people, you don't act when you're safe and you feel comfort. Okay. So vulnerability equals letting people see the real you, fear equals your brain trying to protect you from past pain. Like I just said, real intimacy requires honesty about your fears, your flaws, and your needs. Uh, that also directly challenges the images that we present to other people, which I just mentioned. So earlier I mentioned um your brain and how it doesn't know that vulnerability isn't something that um we should be afraid of. So your brain doesn't know the difference between emotional rejection and physical danger. So it just sees fear is fear. There it doesn't really have the capability to separate. This has to do with my emotions, and this is actually my life being physically placed in danger. That's why it's always putting into the terms of fight or flight, right? So I always talk about childhood trauma because I feel like a lot of the things that we go through as adults comes from our childhood trauma. So I briefly touched on it last week, but I'm gonna talk about how fear of vulnerability starts early. Um, we all heard the stop crying. My homeboy, we was we have problems with that. Um, you're too sensitive. We hear that a lot. Uh, go to your room until you calm down. Okay. So, what children learn from this is my feelings are a problem. I get love when I'm quiet or easy or a people pleaser. Um, showing emotion gets me ignored and punished. That's what the child is learning from those three things that I mentioned. So, as a result, as an adult, shutting down instead of opening up, because you've learned as a child that your emotions aren't accepted, and you're safer when you don't share your emotions. So, shutting down is going to be your default. Laughing when something hurts, when somebody hurts your feelings, you're laughing at it instead of addressing that it hurts your feelings, or maybe somebody's talking about you indirectly, you're making a joke out of it instead of acknowledging how that might make you feel, and saying I'm good when you're not. I'm big, big on this. I'll say I'm good about everything. I won't tell nobody what's wrong with me until I feel like I physically need to say something. So in real life, most people on social media how they reflect vulnerability or how this shows is um you know those stories that they give where it's like I had to grow up fast or the the I was I was the strong one. These are a lot of people that weren't able to be vulnerable as children, their feelings and their emotions were bypassed based on what was going on with the adults in their life at the time. So the blunt truth is being strong was survival, not a personality trait. It's not who we are.
SPEAKER_04:We were just what we've been through.
SPEAKER_05:Yeah, it's a hundred percent what we've been through and what we were taught over periods of time by the adults that were around us because they didn't know no better. And in return, you got a whole two, three generations of people that don't know how to be vulnerable. I mean, just last week we found out that a lot of y'all don't even know what intimacy is. Oh shade. Oh shade. So we're talking about we talk about social media. Social media makes us make it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Social media makes vulnerability confusing. Yeah, okay. So vulnerability gets attention. We all know that. You get on the internet and start crying, people are gonna be in your comments, whether it's good attention or bad things. Always go crazy because people are like, oh my god, I'm going through this, and people are vulnerable or they're like, I can't stand when people be crying on social media. Me neither. It's just time to record yourself. No facts, like or even if it's alive, like crazy. Get yourself together. Yeah, I used to I used to do that. Um, I used to post like what was going on like if I'm single, I'd be like, oh my single, fuck these niggas, and it was like, damn, you know, I'm going through so much. Like, I just hate everybody. I used to post that so much, but then I was like, everybody keep asking me what's wrong. And I hate when people are in my business and ask me what's wrong. So you still think like maybe you want it to be a good thing. Do you think that maybe deep down inside you did want someone to ask you what was wrong? I did. Yeah, but not too many people because it was like too many comments, too many DMs. And that's the that's the problem. You you want the right person vulnerable, but you you don't want what comes with being vulnerable. So most of the things that go viral when it comes to vulnerability is the crying videos, the call-out videos right after a breakup, the I'm done explaining myself, this is how I feel videos. And what's actually happening is you're having an emotional release, but you're not processing those emotions. So it is more so you're seeking validation than you are connection. Because you don't really want somebody to talk to you. You don't really want anybody else's opinion. You just want, you know, not you, but people just people just want to feel like they're being heard and like they have somebody on their side agreeing with them. So um, examples that I can give is uh like I said earlier with the crime videos, but posting a sad story and then deleting it, I used to do that shit.
SPEAKER_00:I used to do that.
SPEAKER_05:I used to post shit and then delete it. Like as soon as I didn't like how people was responding to it, I would delete it. Uh trauma dumping. I hate trauma bonding and comments and shit. I hate I hate when like you say I'm going through something and everybody in the comments gotta tell you how they're going through the same thing. No, right. You know, this not helping. And then blocking people instead of having conversations. I don't like blocking people.
SPEAKER_07:Sometimes you gotta block a motherfucker, though. Just because you know what you will send in that text message, you have to block them.
SPEAKER_05:I got a couple pages of block people, like you can keep scrolling for a while, and it's a lot, it's a lot of block people. So public vulnerability feels safer than private intimacy. Uh, because strangers can't actually reject you. They don't know who you are and what you feel. That's why nobody likes being vulnerable in public. Because you don't want people to know the real you. You don't want to know, you don't want people to know what's really going on with you, and then they really don't like you, and then you have to sit back and reflect on the fact that damn, I'm really don't nobody like my ass. Like, or I I I really got problems. Or X, Y, and Z. It it can be an array of different things for why people don't share their true shows online. So now I real quick and we're gonna close it out. Why people avoid real quick. I'm sorry. Why why why people avoid real intimacy? If uh if care was consistent, conditional, intrusive, or unsafe, the nervous system learns that connection as an equal risk. So earlier I mentioned how your brain is unable to separate actual danger from just like a stressful situation. That that's what it's talking about. Fear, fear of truly being seen is what's going on. So, um, in plain language, if closeness once hurts, your body will avoid it even if your heart wants it. If you've been in a relationship and something happened in that relationship, and um you go into the next relationship, in the back of your head, you're gonna be thinking about that. And your brain's not doing that intentionally, it's just associating that emotion that you went through with that person with fear. I'm afraid of that, I don't want to go through that again. So I'm not gonna be intimate with this person, I'm not gonna be vulnerable with this person, I'm not gonna share anything with this person. It's it's like a defense mechanism. That's how I am, it's how you protect yourself. So, because being seen means someone that can leave or someone can leave with accurate information about you. So earlier I mentioned the mask. So a lot of people don't like putting their masks down, but on the opposite end of it, you got people that um are constantly busy because they don't want to have one-on-one connections with people. So every time you plan something with them, they always got something going on. Or uh people that are in situationships or don't want to give titles to people because they don't want to get that close to that person or end up getting their feelings hurt because the person is talking to other people, or um, you'll have shallow connections, connections that are only based off of physical interactions and have nothing to do with the personality of the person. And then we always talk about performance and performing on the line online. You you want somebody simply because that person is popping online and you want the clout from them. You have no intentions of being vulnerable with them, telling them anything, because you have the fear of the same thing that has occurred in the past occurring again. So your brain is is proactively telling you, nah, let's avoid this, let's do something different this time. But the issue with that is that you're not processing the emotions that come behind that fear. Okay, I said I was gonna be real quick. I'm sorry, I'm gonna close it out.
SPEAKER_07:Okay I got questions. Do your thing.
SPEAKER_05:Not I got questions. Just to close you guys out, your brain is wired to avoid pain before it seeks connection. These are things that I want you guys to remember from what I just kind of spewed out. When vulnerable when vulnerability once led to rejection, your nervous system learns a shortcut. And that shortcut is fear. Fear isn't emotional, it's biological. Your brain has no control over how you experience fear. You literally cannot control it. Your body reacts first and then your thoughts come directly after. Intimacy requires emotional regulation. If someone never learned how to self-soothe or tolerate discomfort or communicate needs, or they avoid intimacy because they lack the tools to survive it in in plain terms. If you're never taught how to deal with your emotions or how to process your emotions, you're not gonna be able to do that though, or you get okay. So I have a follow-up question for everybody that I want y'all to think about. Y'all don't have to answer it. And this question is when I avoid opening up, what am I actually trying to protect myself from happening again? So when I avoid opening up, what am I actually trying to protect myself from happening again?
SPEAKER_07:You know what it is in my face.
SPEAKER_05:Oh my god. Right. That's a big one. It's like if I'm bitting to you, like, why would you say what I told you to put me more in a vulnerable position?
SPEAKER_07:Bitches do it more than anybody. I ain't gonna lie.
SPEAKER_05:It's really the niggas. But I'm gonna use Switch's favorite word, accountability. When people do that shit to you, you hold them accountable. You hold them accountable immediately as soon as that happens. Why are you talking about something that I told you in confidence? I told you that when I was being vulnerable and you're using it against me now. That's something very shitty to do. It's very shitty. I I call I call people out on that shit all the time. If you use something I told you and try to use it against me, you're done because I know I can't trust you. I swear to God, you are having dealt with something. I'ma end you. I'm gonna end you because if you like I said all the time, you you go low, I'm going to hell.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah.
SPEAKER_05:And it's not it's not intentional, it's just that like when I'm vulnerable with people, I'm vulnerable because that's how I want to be with people. And if you take advantage of that and you make me kind of retreat back into that childhood version of me, the person that couldn't say anything, and every time I said something, I want to whoop it. It was go sit down, go stay in the child's place. I love you girl about it. I'm angry. I'm angry because you I'm I'm taking advantage of the opportunity to be vulnerable and you're using it and taking around like that. I couldn't take it. Okay, I ain't gonna lie. I don't like so I used to do that, right? But the reason that I did that is was was because I feel like if you're continuously doing the same pattern, I want to remind you this is what you were doing. So why are you still doing the same thing? So me bringing it up is not me trying to throw it in your face, me bringing it up is trying to remind you. I like that's all that is. So yeah, sometimes that's that's I feel like that's all it is. But now I I'd be like, all right, maybe when you was doing that, you was at a low point. I ain't gonna bring it up no more. That's fine. So I got into that point now because I feel like it was hurting the person that I was saying it to. So I was just like, you know what, I'm gonna just I'm gonna vibe. Accountability. That's that's what it is. I'm trying to put you in that mindset of like you taking accountability. Yeah, I'm paying attention to what you told me, and I'm a point, A's up. I agree. I agree with that. I agree with that. And I mean a manipulation tactic that I use a lot is putting stuff into general statements, like broad statements so it doesn't feel like you're attacking that individual person, especially if they're being vulnerable. So if somebody comes to you and they're being vulnerable, let's say about how um they can't afford to pay their rent this month. When you when you come back to them with that energy, you'll be like, listen, life is tough for everybody. I'm struggling too. I do that a lot. I try to bring it back on myself, like I'm struggling too. I ain't no different. You know, putting yourself on a level where you're not only being sympathetic but empathetic as well. Um, I've noticed that that has made people feel a little bit more comfortable with being vulnerable with me because instead of judging them and coming back with them, like, what really what you been doing? Why you ain't been hustling? It's more so like, shit, I already know. I already know. We work together because we both struggling. And a lot of people feel like, as a human, I mentioned this before, we're communal people. So a lot of people feel like if we're going through something and and one person is going through it when I feel like we're all going through it, it makes it easier to get over it. Versus you feeling like I'm just the only one struggling. I'm the only one going through this. We love to say nobody understands what I'm going through. You just don't understand. You just don't understand. Nobody will ever understand. Yes, we do. It's only but so many things that can happen to people in the world. Yeah. Somebody else done been through it. I hate to hear it all the time, but my best friend hits me with this all the time. It could be worse. It could be worse, bitch. I hate that shit.
SPEAKER_08:It definitely could be worse. Yeah, that don't mean to get you worse.
SPEAKER_07:Motherfuckers could be dead.
SPEAKER_05:Oh line. Okay. So y'all already know what it is. It's Lex rated, and this was triggered. I hope I gave y'all something to think about and you talk about.
SPEAKER_04:That's it. So that's all you do.
SPEAKER_05:We gotta be vulnerable and and just get on that level at the end of this month. Share things, speak to your peers.
SPEAKER_07:The only thing I'm gonna do is. I'm an open book.
SPEAKER_05:I'm an open book.
SPEAKER_07:Because you said the crying thing, you know, when you tell the kids don't go to the or go to your room or to calm down, whatever like that. Or stop over crying. In a sense, because I I I deal with it firsthand with my daughter. You feel me? It is like when you want to teach them that when they're crying over stuff that is small to not cry. You know what I'm saying? But if something happens to you, if you fall or somebody dies or something sad, yeah, let your emotions out. Whatever. But if you're crying because somebody else got a toy you don't got, no, don't cry. Go to your room until you get your shit together, nigga. Like, I don't want to see that shit. I don't want to hear that shit. Why are you crying?
SPEAKER_05:You get you gotta explain that emotion to them because they don't know what they're going through. So if you I'm gonna use the example for sure, for sure. I mean, you know, the example you gave me. You crying over a toy. Why are you crying? Oh, because they got a toy and I don't got a toy. Are you gonna ask them if you can play with their toy? Do you want the same toy? Can we play with a different toy? This toy looks cool. You don't need to cry. You don't need to cry. We can play with this toy. Why are you crying? You got the the goal is to help people understand what emotions they're experiencing.
SPEAKER_07:Juju, juju gonna slap your ass. Be a city.
SPEAKER_05:At a young age. Because if you if you keep telling people don't cry about something and they're actually feeling a emotional response from it, they're gonna learn that damn, I can't be, I can't be emotional.
SPEAKER_07:Okay, what you're saying, in a sense.
SPEAKER_05:The emotion is attached directly to something negative. And if I don't want that negative feeling, I'm not gonna be emotional.
SPEAKER_06:I agree.
SPEAKER_07:Court adjourned, huh?
SPEAKER_05:I could adjourn. Yeah, so now it's about to be my good sis, Bell. Bellamy. Hey, hey, it's Bell of me, a beautiful fucking soul. It's good. And this is unapologetically opinionated.
SPEAKER_07:It's giving no advisory energy.
SPEAKER_05:Argue with your mama. Don't argue with me. Um I didn't shade you. The facts did. Okay, so free bleeding needs to become more normalized. So I'm seeing a lot of think pieces. I'm usually supposed to be doing this on Ladies' Night, and it's a couple men in the studio tonight. But Switch has a daughter. So we can talk about this. Free bleeding just needs to become more normalized. Suki, she was on back and she was saying how she free bleeds. And there's a lot of think pieces about people saying that that's nasty and that's so crazy. How are you saying that that's nasty and that's coming out of you? So are you the nasty bitch?
SPEAKER_07:You said free bleeding? Yes. What is that? That's a good thing.
SPEAKER_03:I'm not explaining it. Please explain it to us. Explain it.
SPEAKER_05:I was explaining that was wild.
SPEAKER_03:Wait, because they don't they didn't watch, they don't watch that.
SPEAKER_05:They don't watch baddies, but as soon as you watch baddies, you use the context. Let's do that in the past. All right, all right. I'm gonna tell you two. Use your context lose. What do you think? It's too meditating. You gotta watch. All right, so just the like the context of what I'm talking about. So Suki, she came into the living room. I think it was Sapphire and Natalie. They were just talking about you know, like who's fine? What's her name? Uh DJ Sky. She said that she don't want to sit on these people's furniture because she's free bleeding, free bleeding. Meaning, no underwear. That means No, you still be wearing underwear if you be free bleeding. No, she'll wear underwear if you're free bleeding bleeding. That's the time that you should be wearing underwear. So that means no, that just means that she's not wearing no tampons, she don't wear no no cups, she's not wearing no pad candies. She just it could be a top letting herself be herself. Now, y'all can Google this. It's multiple reports of there's being arsenic in tampons. Yeah. Yeah. So you're putting that in. It is. But here's the thing though. Okay, a lot of women, they are heavy bleeders. That comes a lot from like what you do on a day to day.
SPEAKER_10:Mm-hmm.
SPEAKER_05:So a lot of times it's like, okay, so normally you're supposed to bleed the first two days and then you're just spotting. I don't want to, you know, get too much into that because it's like I'm interested, but I'm just he does have a daughter.
SPEAKER_07:You do have a daughter. And I think it's important that this Sukiyana we talk about either. So This is not surprising at all.
SPEAKER_06:But this is literally top five freakiest women in the world living.
SPEAKER_07:She is letting niggas shit on her. She's going to Dubai. Wait a minute.
SPEAKER_05:I said, nigga's paying for. Who said that? Allegedly. She's been saying that. I ain't never heard her say that. Me either. She's not on the interview.
SPEAKER_07:They go to Dubai, they get shit on by these rich niggas and get it back. Go ahead, man.
SPEAKER_04:I hear you, but I'm saying with Suki coming to play. Because I that bitch. She said that to say that, and I ain't never heard it.
SPEAKER_07:She does be saying that.
SPEAKER_04:Send me the reference. I'm going to send you the cook. That's my sis.
SPEAKER_05:I'm not her, but she is me. It's you know, do what you, you know, you feel like you're comfortable doing, but you putting tampons and tissue and chemicals into your vagina every month. What do you think that's gonna do? It's gonna create cysts and it's gonna create fibroids.
SPEAKER_08:So, you know, do you stop?
SPEAKER_05:Okay, my next one is Donald Trump is on to something. Yes! You finna get canceled. Oh my mama, cow. I'm gonna cancel you. I freebly. I freebly. So before you skip that, I don't know about everybody. I as well free. I freebly as well. Yeah, I wear, but I wear the period panties. Oh, okay, okay. That's that makes sense. Yeah, I just an option. But last last two days I wear regular underwear. But so the thing for me is like it'd be still in your crack. No liners or nothing be like Jenny, you just you know, I take extra showers. I use the wipes when I go to the bathroom instead of toilet paper. I use the biggest.
SPEAKER_08:You know, my thing is for me, I heli be only at home though. Cause it's like I don't see how people go out in public and flee beat, though.
SPEAKER_05:Yeah, it's not for it's not for public. That's why she said that she don't want to sit down on free.
SPEAKER_08:No, trust me, I I watch myself, so I get it.
SPEAKER_05:Yeah, yeah, it's it's based on your diet, it's based on your flow. And some days it could be a little bit more worse than other days, but you don't you should not be wearing tampons, and then that's why you get toxic shock syndrome and all this. Like, come on, I've been hearing about that since Vincent.
SPEAKER_07:Now that you say that that shit do go up your pussy, though. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like that shit.
SPEAKER_04:Do y'all know Anna was in the hospital years ago when she first started batteries for that? It's just sitting in your pussy, right? Yep, she forgot it was in there.
SPEAKER_05:Yep.
SPEAKER_04:Yeah, she ended up in a big thing.
SPEAKER_05:Yeah, people forget it in there.
SPEAKER_04:That shit is real as fuck. I understand that. But I think it's a good idea. So if you use a pad, then it's like, okay, the chemical is still going up your pussy. Yeah, please let me know.
SPEAKER_05:Sitting there for hours until you go back and change it. But I'm just changing your pad frequently, bitch. Yeah, yeah, I changed your pad. That pussy needs a break.
SPEAKER_07:Get the patch or something.
SPEAKER_05:Oh no, that's just as dangerous.
SPEAKER_07:That's just as dangerous.
SPEAKER_05:What they gotta do with periods.
SPEAKER_03:You should go out of period at all right 1213. What's going on with Donald Trump?
SPEAKER_05:Donald Trump is onto something. And I'm gonna tell I'm gonna tell y'all why. I'm I did not vote for this man. I am not MAGA. But just think about it, think about it, think about it. So he's the funding, the Department of Education, homeschool y'all kids. Yeah. First of all, he was already talking about taking slavery and shit. All right, I don't have kids, but I do. When did you tell your kids about slavery? Or did they have to learn when they went to school? Um, I think I started telling my kids kind of young. So me and my kids talk about everything. I can't remember the exact conversation, but I know they were a lot younger.
SPEAKER_04:Like, me and my youngest are best friends where we talk about everything in the world.
SPEAKER_05:And like that's something that I pride myself on, like not letting them be, you know, under the under the covers or whatever. Like, they have to know everything that's fucking going on. But I don't remember the first conversation that I had.
SPEAKER_04:I think it was based around Martin Luther King and like people not liking us for you know our skin color.
SPEAKER_05:So, okay, he was on to that. So they're taking that out of the school books, especially in Florida. I don't know if it's only happening in Florida, but it's definitely happening in Florida. Um, he's taking that out of the and I just okay, I want them to know the bad, but also the good. Like, we were also kings and queens. Like, okay, yeah, that is something that happened. And also the food stamp thing that happened, that everybody was in a frenzy. White women were going crazy. Yep. And then I noticed that it was a lot of people talking about like grow your own shit. Yeah, all this GMO shit. Like, come on. So he was, you know, doing something with that, and like the ice shit, it's just like, okay, so then there's red lining, and it was people that look like all of us in this room that were not getting approved for housing, but then other people come here from other countries and they get approved for housing. Preach. So we were talking about earlier. I don't think that man don't like us. I think he I feel like he know our potential, and then he went on and he was just like, black people are always getting scammed. For some reason, why did we all take that as like a an like an insult? Are we not? Are we not getting scammed? We still ain't got our 48 because in a mule. Where's our reparations? We ain't getting no goddamn reparations. The Jewish people got their reparations. We need our reparations. As much as he likes us, and as much money as he can shift around and move and shake, where is it? If it's a portion, it's so many of them. I'd be okay with a push.
SPEAKER_03:It's too many, it's too many African American people.
SPEAKER_05:They don't even know who to give us to the biggest. They don't even know who to give it to. Do we give it to the mulattos? Do we give it to the people that's like 50% African and they families down here? Do we give it to the people that's Native American and Native American? The whole thing is, is it's too many people over here that was like in bred and mixed together and shit. Like he can't he can't give us all our reparations. Of course not. Give me a portion. Do something for the black people.
SPEAKER_04:You got enough money, you have enough power, you have enough will.
SPEAKER_05:We ain't got no money. We print that shit on a daily basis.
SPEAKER_04:He could print some up.
SPEAKER_05:Print it. He'll print it for his own his own uh likings. I'm with you though. Donald, Donald Trump is on to some shit. He he he says some stupid shit, he's crazy, but he's doing a lot more than biting. He may be a Zionist, he may be a fascist, he might be a little bit of a, you know, rapey a little bit. But he I feel like a little rapey. Just a little rapy. Yeah, he can't. Um and then he filed for bankruptcy seven times. Yeah. Plus, I did too. I filed for bankruptcy. And then they like they try to downplay it like it wasn't something, like it's something bad. Like technically, it's just like now all your debt is gone. It's your right. You can start over again since we already are just a numbers. It's your right thing. I know I don't know nobody who did that shit three times. That's because we ain't got enough money to do that shit three times. So that means you weren't even equipped to take care of your funds. How are you equipped to run the world? Nah, you are equipped to take care of your funds. But but you spent too much money and now you gotta start over. And it's another smart thing, they don't put all their like they don't put all their funds into themselves. It gets spread everywhere else. So that's how they keep getting the residuals. Yeah, you don't put nothing in your name, you're just getting rid of all the bad shit. I need to learn more about bankruptcy, ho. Let me go file that shit. Yeah, yeah. I definitely it was a good choice.
SPEAKER_07:I don't have a lot right now, but that's how niggas protect their asset. Exactly. That's why Blueface is acting like he's broke right now. You gotta learn from the crooks of the other world.
SPEAKER_05:Yeah, but that's the thing. You want a crook running the world? I mean, I would prefer a crook than a pushover. I agree. I would prefer a crook than a pushover. If you was Rhymin Hook.
SPEAKER_07:Yeah, yeah. Yeah, like Rhymin's hook. For sure, for sure. You need a gangster office. You just take it, take it, take it from everybody. If y'all have a gangster in office, your country's gonna get took over.
SPEAKER_05:But I see that's the thing. I don't think I don't think Donald Trump is trying to take from people. I think he's just forcing people to work and to get it themselves. Yeah, that's the American dream. The American dream is to be able to come over here. I don't want to be on welfare. I've never been on Welfia damn. I mean, like, you know, but they got in the air. Which is nothing wrong with that. No, it is everybody. Americans are just lazy. We're just lazy. Don't nobody really want to get out here and do it. And those of us that do are either successful or they're still working to get what they want. But the average American does not want to do shit and is lazy as shit, will sit at home all day not doing shit, and then be upset when the president makes laws and shit that they don't even vote for and they don't do shit to contribute to the goddamn. They don't even pay fucking taxes. How you upset and you don't pay taxes?
SPEAKER_07:Donald Trump don't give a fuck about white, black, Mexican, or nothing. He is a business. I don't care about green, green. He is getting paid by somebody back. Green face of the of America. He's doing whatever they say as long as they keep paying. Oh, you want these motherfuckers kicked the biggest thing.
SPEAKER_05:He's been definitely making the rules.
SPEAKER_07:Yeah, you feel me?
SPEAKER_05:He's been changing it and amending it and fucking switching shit around.
SPEAKER_07:Joe wasn't fucking with whoever paying him now. Joe was fucking with that nigga.
SPEAKER_05:That's why we in debt. Joe's one of the most highest paid presidents. Like retired president. Yes. He got paid the most. I just saw her. Joe got paid the most. Out of everybody in history, he got paid the most as a president. For what I have no fucking clue. They probably paid his ass to be quiet. Hell yeah. No, I'm fucking black. Mala's not white. My drill ain't black. She's definitely not white. She's not white. I don't think she's black either. She's Indian. She is Indian. No, she's uh she's West Indian, not like Native American American.
SPEAKER_08:Right.
SPEAKER_05:Yeah, she's West India. Okay, I'm gonna say one more.
SPEAKER_08:I'm gonna say one more. I'm gonna say one more. Shake the table a little bit. Yeah, yeah, I know.
SPEAKER_07:I like shaking this shit.
SPEAKER_05:The older generation says that we're over sexualized, but did they ever stop to think that half of us were raped in touch by our uncles? Uncles. Uncles, brothers, teachers, sisters. But nobody wants to talk about it. Alright, Alabama's the one with uh we're gonna be fucking their cousins. Now they're everywhere over the world. Motherfuckers playing house.
SPEAKER_07:Motherfuckers playing houses again.
SPEAKER_05:And then it was talked about on zoos, Krishan and Sean's talking.
SPEAKER_04:I just I believe Krishan for sure. I don't know. What happened?
SPEAKER_07:I don't know. Your dog gonna holler.
SPEAKER_04:I definitely believe her.
SPEAKER_07:I I believe her, but I feel like Tosiki's so mad because she was a little bit of a she was with it. Like Krishan was in her right mind, but Krishan was with the shit. Yeah. And she like, damn, you trying to flip it. Like, even though it's wrong, even though it was wrong.
SPEAKER_05:She was a child. Of course, she probably was with it because they was kids. Yes. When you play house, you just they were both kids. But I feel like it's like just like you said, you was like, oh, we playing house. 18 years old. Either what they saw, what was done to them, or that's like seven. It's not no, oh, you're a hot girl. Like, I didn't, I'm never believed ever. 18 girls hump the fence, do all kinds of shit when I was a kid. I used to just be like, I didn't understand.
SPEAKER_09:That's why we can't say we can't.
SPEAKER_07:She just tried to flip it on. Like Tosiki's.
SPEAKER_04:No, Toseki is mad because Krishan didn't retract her statement and say, no, that never happened. She's sticking to her truth. But she hasn't been speaking about it anymore. She just didn't retract her statement. So it's not like she's still doing interviews. She's like, yes, my sister didn't even. No, they've been talking about it. Like she probably just like for real? I ain't gonna be like, since the show came out. Trauma is trauma.
SPEAKER_05:She wanted to know her trauma. People on like online, like, oh, she's lying, she's lying, she's lying. Okay, what's not there?
SPEAKER_07:If she was lying to Siggy would have been fought her.
SPEAKER_05:I do not know.
SPEAKER_07:I don't think she's not. What you mean she ain't gonna fire her sister?
SPEAKER_03:She's not gonna fire her sister though.
SPEAKER_09:Well nobody just pay. Like when nobody there but them two, so nobody knows what the fuck the truth is.
SPEAKER_03:No, that is fact. No matter what.
SPEAKER_09:Don't nobody know what the real truth is. We can speculate and we can take a side. Motherfuckers take sides all the time. But unless you was there, you don't know what the fuck is going on. You don't know who you don't know who lying, who got motives, and who wasn't like it's not. That's why motherfuckers don't take it away from Christian because they don't want to say you lying. Because she didn't know that they feel like she is a motherfucker. So, one person who has talked about this. We need another motherfucker to come say, No, motherfuckers was on that. Ticket little freaky motherfucker that was touching us back then. Or a motherfucker need to say, No, her little ass was with it, or she was but she going. Fuck you talking about look at her now.
SPEAKER_05:But I think what Bell's trying to focus on is the fact that somebody's a bust. Somebody somebody taught the kids that in order for them to act that way. That's why you have to watch your children around other children because they're exposed to things that you're not exposing them to, and now they're trying to do it with other kids. No, it's a cycle. And then we try to, and then especially in black families, y'all try to put it up under the rug, and it keeps happening. It keeps happening, it keeps happening. Like that girl Nazaia.
SPEAKER_09:Man, y'all wouldn't know it's true.
SPEAKER_07:The freakiest motherfuckers. Come get me. Kick, scream, stab, come get that. Nope. On the same.
SPEAKER_05:Nope. Nope. That's a real point. Kick, scream, stab, come get that. Maybe trying to sweep that shit under the rug. That is facts. But I'm Bellamy a beautiful fucking soul and I love to shake the fucking table. Yeah.
SPEAKER_04:Definitely shake that motherfucking table.
SPEAKER_05:Because now I'm thinking about Desiah Harris. Y'all ain't hear about that girl? What happened in Detroit? Yeah. She basically went missing her like her aunt's boyfriend, baby daddy.
SPEAKER_04:She had like five kids with this man that was in the family for like years. And supposedly they knew about his whole record when she got with him. And she was 16 and he was an adult at the time. And they had five kids together. But she the boy was always around the girl. And supposedly she was pregnant at the time that she went missing. And they haven't found a body or anything, but it's been a minute. Like he's on trial right now, or whatever. I mean, so much shit has come out. Like he graped his four-year-old daughter against her.
SPEAKER_05:Please stop leaving these girls alone with these men. You know what the fuck is that? Please stop. And it's not, it's not even about men, because there's there's teachers out there. There's been like about three, four teachers on the on the on the news in the last four months. No, I'm not I'm talking about I'm talking about random. I'm talking about random. I'm talking, okay. You're right, you right. I gotta be specific. Stranger. I gotta be specific. Strangers. Strangers don't don't show your child with a male that's a stranger. Yeah, he was.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, he was. He was. Yeah, he was a part of the family.
SPEAKER_05:He definitely was. He definitely was married in. He a stranger. But I mean, on this on the same note, you really not say family, family does the same thing.
SPEAKER_07:I'm gonna tell y'all right now. Me and my baby mama went out the other day to take pictures. It's a very co-parenting situation. We ain't fucked since Juju was three months. You feel me? In her stomach.
SPEAKER_04:You have to.
SPEAKER_07:You have to.
SPEAKER_04:I had to put that on the room.
SPEAKER_07:It's co-parenting, we still fucking it's co-parenting. We ain't touching. You feel me? And we ain't touching. So we went take pictures the other day. Whatever, woo woo. I dropped them back off at the house. She left her phone in my car. I take the phone back to the house. I gotta pee too. So I go upstairs. I'm like, here, here go your phone. Gotta use the bathroom. She like, yeah. I go in and I hear the door slam.
unknown:Like, what the fuck?
SPEAKER_07:I said, you got a nigga here? She like, yeah, but I ain't really none of your business. I'm like, hell no. I need to know who this nigga is. My daughter is in here. She's with y'all tonight. It's Christmas Eve, so I know she's gonna be up under your ass. This nigga been here all day while we was gone. I ain't on my business. But I didn't even know who he is, so I can he gonna be around my kid. You feel me? That's all it is. So that's what I was saying. That's what I be on. I'm just saying. Like I'm on that. You feel me? She could she she told me. She told me. You feel me? I'm the same. You gotta, you gotta know, bro. You gotta know. Cause you never know.
SPEAKER_05:Yeah, I don't trust nobody. I I mean I don't have I don't have no kids in my own.
SPEAKER_07:Girl, too.
SPEAKER_05:I I don't trust nobody. I don't trust men. I don't trust women. One of my little cousins was assaulted by his babysitter. I don't trust nobody because the the issue is that we're all hypersexualized. And 95% of us are hypersexualized because of something that happened to us as a child, and we were never taught or told that it was bad and it was wrong. And you just keep repeating the cycle. I really do hope that this next generation that's coming up has learned and you know they are getting the help that they need. Because, like I'm saying, the kids that are like seven, eight, nine years old, when they start getting 15, 16, 17, I am hoping that we are instaling, you know, the good traits and qualities that they need to survive, man.
SPEAKER_04:Because our generation is fucked. Our parents' generation is fucked. So they have to be better. And it really does. It's a phone, though. It's a phone.
SPEAKER_07:It feels like now more than ever, that's where like parents is really like you feel me. Not saying our parents did, but I just feel like they didn't have as much. Yeah, they didn't. They didn't have as much support.
SPEAKER_05:They didn't have as much knowledge.
SPEAKER_07:They didn't have fucked up shit going on.
SPEAKER_05:So like now we have to like make sure our kids is all the way down to the patient parents and because I am one of those parents. I am such a patient parent. Like, I have to still learn.
SPEAKER_07:Woo!
SPEAKER_05:I was just still learning.
SPEAKER_07:But yes. I sent it to you. I'm about to send it to the group chat.
SPEAKER_05:Yeah, send it to the group chat. It seems to be group cheating. Pride and bars. Is it pride and bars and pod. I'd be saying pride and bars. Pod P-O-D-D. P O D. I said P O D D. P O D. Said a group.
SPEAKER_07:I said a group. This is funny as shit. What the fuck is this?
SPEAKER_05:Oh, it's screenshot to you.
SPEAKER_07:Crazy as hell.
SPEAKER_05:McShroom. Okay.
SPEAKER_07:The biggest shrew.
SPEAKER_05:You really calling him Big Shroom? That's funny. No, it's Mick Shroom. Shout out to Male. I love Mel.
SPEAKER_07:Male is one of my.
SPEAKER_05:His name in my phone is Mick Shroom.
SPEAKER_07:Shout out to the real Big Shroom, too.
SPEAKER_05:Until I find out his real name.
SPEAKER_07:Male Silas in the motherfucking building.
SPEAKER_05:Oh, it's not hooked up to the Bluetooth. My bad. I thought it was like auto auto-connected to the Bluetooth.
SPEAKER_07:Alright, so more.
SPEAKER_05:Uh my vocals right, Polo.
SPEAKER_07:My vocals, right?
SPEAKER_04:Yeah, that's Jane Boston.
SPEAKER_05:Rollcaster. And spicy. Okay, it's connected.
SPEAKER_07:Little Rouse Bells. One take Timmy. I deserve a Grammy Oscillo.
SPEAKER_06:Alright, I'm finished.
SPEAKER_07:Buss it, be yourself, don't act bougie Even when she great, I still love her, that's Lucy. See up on my mind, blue. She wouldn't be forgotten Even if I took a roof feet, it brought decadent, flow sharp, I sellin' shit, dye hellin' it, hot selling drug dealer etiquette. Just read up, I'm feelin' excellent. Chronic spark, I honor God, don't cry my spot, put hands over your eyes, peek a boot, but I'm not gonna die. Blow electrifying, turn the mic into a lightning ride. No advisory, a switch. I see though, this is pot and bar.
SPEAKER_10:Flip for your ass, V.
SPEAKER_05:Alright, it's Charlotte's most dangerous podcast, and it's your girl Nola Des. And we're sugar closing out. Jasmine like the flower here. And Bella me a beautiful fucking soul. Lex rated Ariola. We didn't say that in a while.
SPEAKER_07:Ariola.
SPEAKER_05:Ariola.
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