The Heavyweight Podcast
Welcome to *The Heavyweight Podcast*, where every week, a dynamic group of four—“this lady and these three guys”—come together to discuss a wide range of topics that both warm the heart and nourish the soul. The Heavyweight Podcast brings together four unique individuals, each with their own perspective, to engage in open and honest conversations about real-life situations. Whether you're in need of a good laugh to release some tension or you're seeking real answers to life’s tough questions, tune in to *The Heavyweight Podcast*. Whatever you're looking for, you’ll find it here.
The Heavyweight Podcast
The Era That Raised Us
We’re going back to the 2000s in this episode—flip phones, PSPs, Y2K panic, TRL, and BET Uncut. We reflect on what that era taught us emotionally, musically, and socially, from major world events to mixtape culture to friendships that held us down through loss.
We also share the advice we’d give our younger selves, and why the 2000s left a mark that still shows up today. It’s nostalgic, honest, and full of energy—just like the decade.
Thanks for tapping in with The Heavyweight Podcast.
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Welcome to the Heavyweight Podcast.
SPEAKER_05:The message behind saying the title of the Heavyweight Podcast is to be able to say that we can we can weigh in some heavy shit. You know, what we're talking about is important from every aspect of it. It's a heavy weight. It's not just about the physical weight, but the weight of things that that can weigh our minds. So I think it's dope that we can have this conversation.
SPEAKER_03:Bring it on again and we reflect on the 2000s.
SPEAKER_04:Do you remember the Y2K bug?
SPEAKER_02:We've already spoken to you guys about the 90s, and now we're gonna talk about the 2000s from the music, the gadgets, maybe your favorite snacks or drink. Today we're gonna explore what we were doing in the 2000s. Some of our favorite moments, maybe not so great moments. This is episode 225 of the heavyweight podcast. I'm Desda Diva. Back again with my favorite three gentlemen and this beautiful young lady. Everybody introduce yourselves.
SPEAKER_04:Yo, yo, yo.
SPEAKER_02:I don't care who go first.
SPEAKER_04:Yo. It was me.
SPEAKER_03:Me who, nigga?
SPEAKER_04:Me.
SPEAKER_03:Me.
SPEAKER_04:Hey Dizzle. You know what it is. Hey Dizzle. Holla at your boy. We here. We're talking about the 2000s.
SPEAKER_02:Are you done?
SPEAKER_04:Don't do that to me.
SPEAKER_02:Oh no, it's funny when he does it to me. But now it's don't do that to me. Do it again.
SPEAKER_04:Oh, so you now, so now you okay, so we're jumping me. Oh okay. It's your boy Mo Lethal.
SPEAKER_02:What's up, Mo Lethal? I'm Sharon.
SPEAKER_05:I'm Magic Mike McFly.
SPEAKER_02:This motherfucker.
SPEAKER_04:Oh, he's stripping. He's stripping. He's taking it off.
SPEAKER_02:Why, why, why? Why? He's taking it off. Are you going towards the direction of wanting to be a stripper?
SPEAKER_05:No. But I might have to. Hey. Because of inflation.
SPEAKER_03:Money is money. Okay. Times is hard. Threw. If I gotta drag my ball across somebody's face with a dollar, they might just be paying you to get off.
SPEAKER_04:You dragging balls. Let's pause. We're okay. Pause, pause, pause. All of it's pause.
SPEAKER_02:Whole damn thing.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:The whole damn thing. Y'all nasty. Yeah, for real.
SPEAKER_03:Because I'm a nasty motherfucker.
SPEAKER_02:Clearly.
SPEAKER_03:That's Cletus.
SPEAKER_02:Clearly. Clearly. As I mentioned today, we're going to be talking about the early 2000s. So let's start off with your instead of telling me how your week was, tell me what your favorite moment in the 2000s was.
SPEAKER_01:Oh.
SPEAKER_05:Favorite moment in the 2000s, let's think.
SPEAKER_04:Favorite moment. Like, does it have to be famous?
SPEAKER_02:No, tell me about your own personal favorite moment that you've got to be able to do it.
SPEAKER_04:There's a lot of shit that blacked out, but shit. It was a hell of a run, those early 2000s. Oh, it was a lot of things lined up.
SPEAKER_03:Oh, mention names so your wife can know.
SPEAKER_06:Wife, love.
SPEAKER_04:Hell of an experimental age. That's where I found the journey.
SPEAKER_00:Like I found the journey.
SPEAKER_04:That's how I learned to look inward.
SPEAKER_02:Oh, God. Melito. Are you guys all older than me?
SPEAKER_03:Yes.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, I can tell.
SPEAKER_03:I'm a baby. Thanks.
SPEAKER_02:No. Like that? That's all we know. Yeah, I knew it. I knew you motherfuckers was old.
SPEAKER_03:Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, I'm still in my 30s.
SPEAKER_02:How old are you?
SPEAKER_03:I'm in my 30s. That's all I'm saying.
SPEAKER_02:Oh, you guys are actually the same age. I think he's a little bit older than you.
SPEAKER_03:I'm still in my 30s.
SPEAKER_02:I'm still in my 30s.
SPEAKER_03:The rest of these niggas in their 40s.
SPEAKER_02:Oh.
SPEAKER_03:So you're not going to be able to do that.
SPEAKER_02:Most of all, nobody on the internet knew that I was in my 40s. You didn't even have to tell these niggas that shit because these niggas didn't know that. I'm sorry for even bringing age up. Okay, let me clarify really quick.
SPEAKER_04:I really said you said your 40th birthday.
SPEAKER_02:I was in here on my 40th birthday. Who actually said it was my 40th birthday was McFly's ass. I didn't say it. Yes, you did, because I watched the fucking episode. Yes, you did. Yes, you did. It was sweet though. You gave me a happy birthday shout out, but nigga, you did tell the niggas I was 40.
SPEAKER_04:I kind of thought that was established.
SPEAKER_02:No.
SPEAKER_04:No? She wrote it down. My bad. She wrote it in the book.
SPEAKER_02:Crazy. I mean that though. You get I only said that because my early 2000s was like, I was still, I was in middle school. So that's why I'm going to go to the house.
SPEAKER_04:This will be fun though. That'll make it be like a different view from that.
SPEAKER_02:I remember 9-11 in my history class. And our you remember Mr. Escobar? Oh, yes. I just thought about him. I'm like, you can relate here. He was an old Mexican guy. He wasn't old enough to hit him. Okay, you went to uni? Yeah, he was. Yeah, we all did. Exactly. We all did. That's tight. Okay, so Mr. Escobar.
SPEAKER_04:Makes me feel older.
SPEAKER_02:Mr. Escobar was my guy. Like, I loved Mr. Escobar. And I remember on nine, but remember he was very like, he was from it, was in the military and whatever. So when 9-11 happened, he rolled in that old ass, you know, the TV when they roll in the TV for school. He brought that in there and we watched that on the TV in class. So like when I think about the early 2000s and you talking about you partying and shit, I'm like, damn, he's older than me. Cause I was a kid. You know what I'm saying? That's the only reason why I said that though.
SPEAKER_04:I know I was just fucking around.
SPEAKER_02:Sorry. No, nigga, we know you was high. You done said it more than once. Oh no, it's yeah, it was your lines was liked up. We got it. Damn, I didn't even answer. Yeah.
SPEAKER_03:Crazy work.
SPEAKER_02:I really didn't answer either. I was expanding on calling him old. Sorry. It's okay. Go ahead. Go ahead, still Mick Fly, please.
SPEAKER_05:My favorite moment of the 2000s was uh not paying bills.
SPEAKER_02:Amen. Touche, nigga. Please get a clap. Please, baby.
SPEAKER_05:I missed those days.
SPEAKER_02:Hey, me back. Baby, I want to stay in a child's place, so goddamn. Nigga. My bad. What's your favorite moment in the 2000s?
SPEAKER_04:You had all this time to think about it.
SPEAKER_03:Lack of bills. Well, thank you.
SPEAKER_05:You got to date yourself, right? Because I did. Oh, yeah.
SPEAKER_03:No, in the early 2000s, I'm a I got together with love my life.
SPEAKER_02:No.
SPEAKER_05:I dated myself a lot.
SPEAKER_02:Not your hand, right?
SPEAKER_03:The way that you my wife.
SPEAKER_02:Okay.
SPEAKER_03:Okay.
SPEAKER_00:I did do a lot of work.
SPEAKER_03:I broke up with my hand for my wife.
SPEAKER_04:No, you didn't.
SPEAKER_00:You're right, Gus. No, you didn't. I should have.
SPEAKER_03:The hair becomes a side. Sorry, Chick. She'd be like, you're not. Oh, you ruined your chances. No, I didn't.
SPEAKER_02:I hear more about you and your hand and him in balconies than I ever wanted to hear in my lifetime.
SPEAKER_05:Did you know I was ambidextrous?
SPEAKER_02:Oh my.
SPEAKER_03:Sometimes you gotta get sometimes you gotta give yourself sometimes you gotta give yourself a stranger, you know?
SPEAKER_02:Get the fuck out of here. Anywho, my that is so crazy.
SPEAKER_03:Can you no you gotta use your non-dominant hand so you don't feel normal?
SPEAKER_04:We go still, we still writing, huh?
SPEAKER_03:Like that's different.
SPEAKER_02:Okay, so it's your roster. Thank you.
SPEAKER_00:What's wrong, Dennis? You nigga.
SPEAKER_02:You are evil. Oh my god. That lady is fucking that shit has me fucking in a choco. That lady is funny as hell now. Um I mean, paying bills, but yeah, I that was like the the last part of my like my childhood, honestly. I mean, not to make things heavy, but my dad passed in 04. So with that being said, well, my dad passed in 04, my aunt, which was his sister, was in 03, and one of his best friends was like my uncle, was in 03. And then in 2002 was my cousin Marquise. So that kind of sparked, like, I had a little trend of death in those years. And I think I I still not in a negative way because it really has shaped how I grieve because I went through boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. So like back to back. Um, but that's what was happening in my early 2000s, and it was a lot and it was heavy, but at the same time, like that was kind of the end of my like that when I look back to right before my dad passing and stuff, like damn, like that was then like the the peak of my childhood because then my dad was gone after that. So early 2000s really are like I was a kid. I was a kid. Sorry for your loss. I didn't know Marquise was your was your cousin. You know, that's reverse I shit. That's my family though. But uh, yeah. Well, I mean, I feel like we don't really have lineage together. And we're not gonna get too too too too uh people. We're not gonna get too deep, but we but I will say this I think his death made us all feel adult feelings real young. Oh yeah, for sure. Real young. We really had to process that a totally different way because that was the first person I ever knew personally that passed. So it made me really have to tap into like a more mature side of me to understand what was even going on. Yeah, and I think years and years and years and years and years later, and death and death and death and death later, I I still find myself like going back to that time. Yeah, because that's what shaped how I knew what grieving was. Yes, whether it be things that I felt I didn't do correctly or things that I kept or did different, but that time in my life shaped it because I I was 14 when Marquise died. I was in my freshman year in high school. It was literally like we were he died on the day of the homecoming dance. So y'all know that like homecoming is the first dance of the year. Like the school year. I remember. And so it was so heavy, but at the same time, I had only really experienced like maybe you know, my grandmother's friends passing away or something. It was never like my homie, like you know what I mean? And so you're right. For a lot of us, that was like our first little jump at that. And it was just like, damn, like this is really a thing. Like, yeah. So I was I was speaking to somebody the other day, and I and I told him it's crazy how those of us that went to North are still very connected like a family. And I often wonder if that played a part in that because we grieved that together like a family. Yeah. So it kind of makes me think like maybe that's why we all all stayed connected. Yeah, I think so. I mean, and then unfortunately, I I always say, um, like we we grew up in Riverside, right? And that wasn't like, you know, people that grew up in LA, they was like, oh, we got homies dying every day. Like, yeah, it was gang. We just grew up regular, but we had a lot of death. Yes. I don't think that our parents and our grandparents experienced death as I'm 37 years old. I have experienced a lot of death. And I it didn't really make sense to me until I was probably like 30. I remember my my oldest kid's dad's grandfather passed away. And I remember just feeling so bad for him because I was thinking we hadn't been together for years, but that's still my dog. And I was just like, I know that you don't know what death is like. And I like broke my heart for him because I'm like, damn, I hate that I went through it so young. But at the same time, I'm like, you 30 years old. Like, you're not about to know how to navigate this. Like, this is brand new for you. And you're 30 and you're taking care of kids and you're a whole adult and you have to understand how to navigate death. Like, it's unfortunate that I did it so early, so young. But I've come to a place where I know how I'm gonna navigate it, you know what I mean? So I it like I said, it shaped us, but I also do think that it contributes to shake shaping our community up, you know. Yeah, because I'd be like, God damn, I still know all these same motherfucking people. Yeah, goddamn. It's like I left and came back. I wasn't 3,000 miles away. How the fuck do you think it still remember me? Yeah, I did. And when I I mean, I feel like when we went through it with Levan, it just brought everything full circle, and everybody was just like, damn, we here again. We can't talk about Levan because baby, I will bust out crying. Oh, girl, that's a hard one for me. Um, I still grieve that because I I I don't think I processed that one. We got to talk about something else. I'm sorry, I that's why I said I didn't mean to take it there, but I know that was fancy. That was the beginning of my 2000s. You are, yeah, I get it. And you are absolutely right when it comes to Levan. I think he is one that is gone, but we'll never Oh that's my nigga. I you know what? And and also with that, I I carry my people. That's like that's kind of one of my that's my comfort. My dad, I mean, I got my dad's face, and then I messed around and gave it to all three of my kids. So I genuinely I carry my dad. My grandmother passed away a couple years ago. I have it's an ofrenda in Spanish, so we always call it that. But like an altar in my home that has like pictures and the stuff of the people um that have passed away. So when I'm feeling, you know, I got Levan's candles. I might light Levan's candle. Like, I really feel like my people are like with me, man. You should. That's the good. You should. And I'm glad you think that way, because that will definitely be another episode if you are back with us. Oh, yeah. Because that's don't be sorry. I know. Because I I was I went too deep into that. You are you are so organically good at what you're doing right now. Stop apologizing.
SPEAKER_04:Okay.
SPEAKER_02:Okay.
SPEAKER_04:I just have one question about the episode. Just for clarification. Are we talking about the first thing?
SPEAKER_00:I was like, I think are you eating? Why is he?
SPEAKER_04:Oh, like what the ate some popcorn when I went upstairs and I had the kernel stuck in my teeth. You know, gap teeth problems. God damn.
SPEAKER_02:Is popcorn flying everywhere at this thing? I got a question.
SPEAKER_04:Oh, it did fly out. Okay, there it is. I thought she turned this into a Western. That's how that shit sounded. Are we talking uh the first decade?
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, I we we're we're most more mostly speaking, yes, of the first decade. So let's let's let's do the decade. Till 2010. Till 2010. So 2010. So let me ask a more lighthearted question. What's the most do not apologize? No more. When you said lighthearted, I'm like, damn, I'm the one that made it heavy. But go ahead. You good. Uh what's the most early 20s? Okay, that I don't like how that's worded. Nigga, what's your favorite song from the early 2000s? I love that. The early 2000s? Yes.
SPEAKER_01:I don't know. I gotta get my phone. From 2000 to 2010.
SPEAKER_02:I actually look at my phone for the song too. Yeah, I gotta. There's too many songs for that. Give me, give me, just give me the first one that popped the let me go see what Chris Brown had going at that time. No, Chris.
SPEAKER_03:Nigga had run it. That's what that nigga had going on. Right.
SPEAKER_02:Was that 2000s? Yeah. No, I'm talking about uh Yeah. No, my favorite song from him at that time was that uh Did it dude.
SPEAKER_04:When was Back That Ass up? That was '99. That was '99.
SPEAKER_02:Hash Money Records taking over for the nine and the two thousands.
SPEAKER_04:So don't try to do that.
SPEAKER_02:You know, the nine nine.
SPEAKER_04:And the two thousands.
SPEAKER_02:They started it in the night nine.
SPEAKER_04:It might have been. He was letting you know that in here in the nine. If it's December 31st. It was still the 99s.
SPEAKER_03:Back That Ass Up had the the 90s and Tibdrill had the 2000s. Oh, yeah.
SPEAKER_04:Well, if it's two when it comes to the ass shakings, but I'm saying you can't say I used to love Tibetans. Tibdra was in a different, you had to be certain places.
SPEAKER_02:Okay, that was I'm placing it now. Like that was that was house party days for me.
SPEAKER_05:There's a lot. Yes.
SPEAKER_03:There's a lot of songs.
SPEAKER_05:I'll just say Roses Outcast. Oh, I like that song.
SPEAKER_02:That's a good one. I like, did you see them get um what they got the inducted in? That I love Andre 3000. Yeah, he's so genuine. Yeah. Such a genuine person. Um, I don't know. I ain't got no somebody else to answer. I'm still I like Sunshine from Lil Flip. That was my song. I like that song for a very long time. Damn, that's not so good.
SPEAKER_04:I did not expect that. I did.
SPEAKER_02:I like that song for a little bit.
SPEAKER_04:No, that's cool. That's just not what I thought. How do you feel about the Tiger version?
SPEAKER_02:I like I I want to target a stop.
SPEAKER_04:So you like when I got a 2000 playlist.
SPEAKER_02:So I'm gonna go ahead.
SPEAKER_04:You like that line? I'm gonna try to do it. I'm gonna do nothing but swell.
SPEAKER_02:Swell a bitch.
SPEAKER_04:Damn, you're gonna just be sour.
SPEAKER_02:That was before I had a good understanding of when lyrics are good and when lyrics are bad. I didn't know. They can be catchy, though. And I've only learned that in the last like two years in being around you that okay, now some of these niggas don't be great. And it's only because the shit that you say makes so much sense, and then there's so many other rappers that we've like interviewed here, Eugene O'Neill, you know, personal that rap and they shit make actual sense that I realize, like, okay, hold on. Some of this shit we be singing.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah.
SPEAKER_05:Demand more from your rappers.
SPEAKER_02:I'm gonna just yes, yes.
SPEAKER_04:Don't. It's it's hilarious. Because you guys have the ability.
SPEAKER_02:Like, the ability is there. It's just y'all need to listen to niggas that are doing the thing. Cause I don't know.
SPEAKER_03:But what's your song? I'm gonna go uh uh International Players album. Uh Anthony. Oh that's a good song.
unknown:What?
SPEAKER_04:Oh, I was uh I'm lying. I'm like a bird. I'm tripping. What the fuck am I doing? Like a bird? I'm like a bird. Like Nelly Fatato?
SPEAKER_02:Nelly, that was my shit too, though. Hell yeah. I like when Nelly, when they put Nelly Fatato on the get your freak on remix, and the bitch was up there. I was like, okay, bitch, I'm she scattered. I like that. Little jazzy ass white lady. I like we used to have like that. Was the the era of the the white songs crossing over, my boy. Like I had a gang of white songs that I liked back then. Me too. Infinite. Me too. And we was back then.
SPEAKER_03:I still like them. Yeah, still.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, now it's different though. It's not as many crossover.
SPEAKER_03:There's footage of me singing white songs. Yeah, that's what I'm saying. I've been saying for me.
SPEAKER_02:He had us right, he had us do a whole in-sync. You singing the same songs though. In sync, like they got a new song. Like, no, he's saying that he still likes those songs that were like this song. I definitely still like those. Adam Levine will get played in my car. Yeah. Maybe on the way home, too.
SPEAKER_03:I almost bought the the uh Backstreet Boys album, the vinyl.
SPEAKER_02:You should have, because music sounds better on writing.
SPEAKER_03:When you say things like that, that's how we know you got disposable income.
SPEAKER_04:Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:I almost bought a vinyl the other day. All right, let's go. I'm gonna go with 20 foes by T.I. Okay. I was when I tell you I was eight.
SPEAKER_03:I'm after you said 24 and not bring them out.
SPEAKER_02:No. Well, okay, I was a TI fan at that time. Okay. Like a hundred percent, I love me some T.I. But 20 Foes was like his first little yeah. That was like his first little, but that was my shit. What's your favorite Nelly album? No, really. Okay. No, I just asked because these two niggas had a debate for it. I was like, I can't even tell you what the names of his album.
SPEAKER_05:I actually did we did you comment that underneath the post when I asked that?
SPEAKER_02:I think I said that. I think I think you said I don't listen to that. I always think you did. Yeah, I'm always honest.
SPEAKER_03:The two thousand there's so many great songs because you gotta think about Lula started in the 2000s, so you gotta think about what's your fantasy. You gotta think about move bitch.
SPEAKER_02:No, that's it. That little cat, have y'all seen that little cat? That little get out the way, get out the way. That little cat is so cute. You also have to like remember where you were. Like, there are some songs that I like, man, that I'd be like, what the fuck? Yeah, yeah. I used to like little flip, and now I'm like, what the girl? Why? What do I? Yeah.
SPEAKER_04:Trina was popping and that ass was fat. Hey, yeah. I was like, I know why I like some songs. She's very pretty.
SPEAKER_02:She was up here. Oh, I'm sorry. Like that monkey like that, do the flip. Shake that monkey was my shit too. But that song still come out, and I might play that. I might put spell on names.
SPEAKER_03:T-Pay started was popping. Yeah, T Bane. Martin, love with a stripper.
SPEAKER_04:It's a lot. Damn, that was a good one.
SPEAKER_03:That was a good era. I've seen that shit.
SPEAKER_05:But I always say we have to think about the current state of music now. It's trash.
SPEAKER_04:Well, I always say 2000. We already thousands is still.
SPEAKER_02:Well, that's I don't even really feel like I listen. I mean, I got a couple people that I'll point out. I mean, not point out, but I got a couple little people that I'll listen to right now, but I don't listen to the masses of right now.
SPEAKER_03:I listen to niggas my age.
SPEAKER_02:I there's a few that I like now, but I really like Tiana Taylor. She comes out with really good music. Summer Walker. Summer Walker's my favorite. Summer Walker. I love Summer Walker's music. She needs to get her ass off the internet. I wish she had a few. Okay, look. Don't stay on the internet. Please stay on the internet. Please. Summer Walker is very like. What is she? She played too much. I play too much. Like, I get that from her. I feel like truthfully, like she she be playing. What I'm getting from her, and this is just because I recently just listened to her whole album. And her whole album is Yeah, I love perfection. That shit is good as it's T. I think. But what I get from the album and from the incident that happened yesterday is.
SPEAKER_01:Oh, that was annoying. Sorry. Go ahead. I didn't see that.
SPEAKER_02:What I get from those two things is that she's hurt and now contributing to another woman's hurt. And I don't condone that. Now I don't give a damn what she's doing in her personal life for per se because I'm still finna spend them records because the records are good. But I just think that's- But if you listen to her music, she's been hurt the whole time she's been popular. Yeah, she's in pain. She's in pain. And she, I wish that she had better friends to rely on because my girls would have snatched my phone the fuck up out of my hand when I got on there talking about the other bitch and her man. That's true. So I just wish that she had a better circle because she's an incredibly, undeniably talented artist. Her music is beautiful and relatable. I just wish that they wouldn't let her get her ass on the internet and go on them damn rampage. But that rampage she went on yesterday, hadn't it? Yeah, I couldn't really look into it. I was okay, so the best yesterday, I didn't, I saw her saying stuff. I don't even I know that she was messing with somebody's boyfriend or whatever. Regardless, I was talking about she funny, like, like she just play a lot. Like when she had my favorite shit, like recently, when because she's been doing the whole little like fuck my type thing or whatever. So she was with the old white man. Yeah. And then she was at the basketball game with a it was like a whole nigga outfit, but he had an alien head on. I'll be damned. And I kind of feel her. Like these niggas make you want to go date an alien. Yeah, I swear to God they do. I swear to God. I like that. I put that on Jesus Gerard. If I give me an alien right now, I would be with an alien. Run this bitch back to Mars. He might be talking about a lot of things. I'm trying to tell you that shit is crazy. But yeah, that's that's my thing with her. But yeah, music is definitely in danger.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah, it is. So it's not real now. It's just too much.
SPEAKER_05:Maurice, would you say you listen to Jay-Z twice then?
SPEAKER_03:He's at it, it was fine.
SPEAKER_05:I'm saying, because you said you listened to people your age, would you since he's Yeah.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, I didn't.
SPEAKER_05:Yeah. You listen twice.
SPEAKER_02:I'm confused. I'm gonna tell you something, and it's gonna break your heart. Like Jay-Z. Change the game was my shit. He got like a few songs.
SPEAKER_03:Change the game was my shit.
SPEAKER_02:You ain't breaking nobody's heart, but you don't like that.
SPEAKER_05:When that goddamn Neptune be dropped. I think she was expecting my reaction. I just was like, I'm not gonna say that. Yes.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, he is. He is. Change the game, you don't like that?
SPEAKER_02:I like that song.
SPEAKER_05:And the funny thing is, I wasn't original.
SPEAKER_02:I like the song he got with the for real nigga that ain't aging.
SPEAKER_04:You got that West Coast shit. Like a lot of West Coast niggas don't fuck with that.
SPEAKER_02:No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. Because I do love East Coast music.
SPEAKER_04:No, no, I'm not saying that, but I'm just saying it's like when it gets to him, it's like it's him.
SPEAKER_02:It's just something about him. But I do like a lot of East Coast, more particularly New York rappers.
SPEAKER_03:Didn't the Rock Riley come out in um 2002? Yeah, I do. That's my show.
SPEAKER_02:Oh my god. Oh, that was the first one? That was the first beat you rapped till you said the man.
SPEAKER_05:Redman.
SPEAKER_02:I feel like music music is meant to be relatable. So if you don't like somebody, you just don't relate.
SPEAKER_05:I didn't like him in the beginning.
SPEAKER_02:And then but it be blowing my mind because y'all keep telling me that y'all don't relate to Tupac being a thug, but he's but he isn't he rapping about being a drug dealer? You ain't sold no drugs, McFly, did you?
SPEAKER_04:But it's the hustle.
SPEAKER_02:That's not a remember, but Nipsey Hustle is one of my like he's literally my favorite rapper. I'm speaking particularly in reference to something that they said previously because because they told me that uh one of them told me that they didn't relate to Tupac because he was a thug. But Jay-Z I don't think Tupac was a thug. That might have been what we said. Tupac was an image of a thug. I don't really think they. I'm sorry. I I'm not disrespecting.
unknown:Okay.
SPEAKER_02:I don't want to have to get put out because oh, yeah, that felt like, yeah, I was like, oh shit. I'll pluck her fucking mic. This is you can get up right now. Why are you here? What is your top five reference? You better say Tupac, Tupac, Tupac, and Tupac. Tupac is for sure in my top five. Yeah, I love him. But I do think that Tupac was like, Tupac was phenomenal, but I think that Tupac was an entertainer. I definitely agree. I I ain't gonna lie to you. I definitely, I definitely agree. I think it was entertaining.
SPEAKER_05:He's more activist than thug. You'll never really hear me quote uh Jay's lines that are uh drug dealing. That's why I said I I didn't really relate to him in the beginning. It's more or less the business kind of like the trans that the transition when he's went from the corporate.
SPEAKER_02:That's fair.
SPEAKER_05:Yeah. So like and it's kind of like he's giving you game. And then he did the thing.
SPEAKER_02:So you know, I'll go back and I'll listen to some things just to kind of maybe there's some things that he has out that I missed. I just he and he doesn't grab my attention.
SPEAKER_05:Because like I my favorite album start from blueprint on, not Oh Lord.
SPEAKER_02:Okay, so not the earlier.
SPEAKER_03:But I like uh here was one that I like. I had to thought I had to think about what you said. The blueprint too. Yeah, because I heard blue, and I was really hoping you didn't say face. Oh no, no, no, no, no, no. Come on. You're not come on, man. You know we better than that, baby.
SPEAKER_05:Blue face.
SPEAKER_02:I hate blue face. This motherfucker, boy, I swear to God, this nigga came back from jail, looked like they held his ass down and drew on his motherfucking face. So that nigga let him. Yeah, that shit is ridiculous. I just asked my kids a couple days ago. I said, Did he get more tattoos? He's such a fucking clown. He looks dirty as hell, and he got a beer belly and it pisses me off. And he got fat in the face, too. Fattest shit in the damn face, and that's saying a lot because I'm fat. I can't stand that motherfucker. But I do not like blue face. Oh god.
SPEAKER_05:They should have given rhythm repetitions in prison.
SPEAKER_02:They should have done. That nigga said, I'm gonna get you. You run it from the dick boo, and I was like, this got to be a fucking joke. He's serious. That's a bar. That's a bar.
SPEAKER_00:I knew I like this nigga. I hated it.
SPEAKER_02:I hated it. Hated it.
SPEAKER_03:I'm gonna say that to my this is my first time here.
SPEAKER_02:I'm gonna say that to my wife. We know you, we know you're gonna say it. We know you're gonna say it. Don't run. Hated it.
SPEAKER_06:That's so funny.
SPEAKER_02:I hated it. I just don't like his music. I but however, I like when he makes songs with other people because the song he made with Cardi B, Cardi B shit went off. He just got a song out with Zoe Osama, and that motherfucker, I like him. He he got new songs? Yeah, he just had a song. It came out yesterday or the day before yesterday we're gonna go. Osama. And I like it. I mean, hey, hey, hey, I like what I like. I like the songs that he makes with other artists. Okay. So that but other than that, he's fucking stupid. Anyways, some people are meant to be features. Yeah, yes. Just throw your little verse on here and move on with your life. Damn, little verse is crazy. Yes. But but honestly, it don't be his verse that make the song crack. He usually jumps on a song that would have cracked without him, but they just let him know you skip his little party to hear the rest of the song. I mean, since you brought her up, I feel like Cardi B is a better is a better feature rapper. I think so too. I got a whole perspective on her. Out of your mind, from a record exec, shit.
SPEAKER_04:You better put out all the singles with just you. I got a whole perspective of Cardi B.
SPEAKER_02:I like her, and I think she's an intelligent woman, and I do agree she is a better feature rapper. I'm tired of her saying nigga, and I have a issue. She's a minican, ain't she? Yeah, she's a minican. She's black. But but there, there are the boat just started.
SPEAKER_04:There are you said the boat just started. Afro.
SPEAKER_02:There are non-Afro. They are uh what is it called? Afro Afro uh what is it? It's a there are Afro Latinos and Afro Latinos, but then there are some that are non-African American Hispanic people solely in those regions. She go look at her parents. Okay. But I thought her daddy looked black. I thought.
SPEAKER_03:I have no problem. But I ain't never I have no problem with Cardi saying nigga. That's okay. I have a problem with goddamn French Montana saying nigga. I have why? Because he ain't a nigga. Yeah, African.
SPEAKER_02:What's the big the the um Isn't he African? The one that's always yelling. Nigga.
SPEAKER_03:What am I talking about? Uh DJ Khaled.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, ain't DJ Khaled not.
SPEAKER_03:He don't say nigga. I don't think he's a nigga, do he?
SPEAKER_02:I I never heard DJ Khaled say nigga, but I wouldn't like that neither. I I feel okay. Here's my issue. They come down on some people for saying it and not others, but depending on their proximity to the culture, and that's what bothers me. Yeah. That's what bothers me. If it's what's good for the goose, good for the gander. If you're gonna let her say it, then let the other people that say. That nigga would get canceled. I mean, he's probably gonna be like white man. I understand that I understand that, but he has proximity to black culture. No, hold on. Okay, so I'm about to we she has proximity to black culture because we're trying to decide is her actual heritage part of black culture. I'm not saying because she grew up with black, but it's not. Eminem is an actual white man, right? No, but she's an actual historical.
SPEAKER_03:No, see, you're wrong. Marshall is a white man.
SPEAKER_04:This uh is a rap guy. This nigga.
SPEAKER_00:This nigga. Yeah, okay. I can concur.
SPEAKER_02:I hate him. That was funny. Listen to it.
SPEAKER_03:Marshall is a white man.
SPEAKER_02:Marshall Matthew. Marshall? It's 100%.
SPEAKER_03:Rap God.
SPEAKER_02:A white man. Anyways, tell me what gadget you would bring back from the 2000s. I'm going to say sidekick because I want to flip my phone so bad. From the early 2000s? Did we still have pagers? Did they have pagers? No. They were going out of style, but it was. I had a pager. Don't call me. Page me and I'll call you back.
SPEAKER_03:I want a pager so bad. That's why you put your phone do not disturb.
SPEAKER_02:How you know? Oh, yeah. My phone is always on. Right now. My phone lives on do not disturb. That nigga know what I'm doing. Yeah, I definitely. No, it does. It lives on do not disturb. I mean, I got my favorites. My kids can call me. My mama can call me.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah. I don't want a gadget. I just want B E T uncut back.
SPEAKER_02:Ooh, Midnight Love. Midnight Love. No, just uncut. Midnight Love.
SPEAKER_03:Just uncut.
SPEAKER_04:Just uncut. I would take both.
SPEAKER_02:I would even take TRL. The black cable box.
SPEAKER_04:That's when we were dating ourselves. The black cable box.
SPEAKER_05:All the channels.
SPEAKER_02:Oh, nothing about y'all's hands.
SPEAKER_05:Just pay the cable man an extra 20 bucks.
SPEAKER_02:Not want to hear about their hands anymore. Yeah. Get used to it. This is what they talk about. Wait till he starts telling me about banning his wife over the fucking balcony. Oh, that's tight. It gets a little that's what you're supposed to do. When you hear it the first time, you're like, oh, we're not supposed to hear it, but that's what they're supposed to be doing. But it's every I think I swear to God, I think we got a break because you hear it. Because it be every episode. I'm a guess. And then we see her, and then we know she done got bent over the damn balcony. I'll be like, girl. And she's so cute. And she's so damn cute and so sweet.
SPEAKER_03:You look at her like, damn, I know that pussy's fire.
SPEAKER_02:Oh my god. I've never, I've never, I've never, you see what I'm saying? I've never looked at your wife and thought that. Okay. The most I've thought was her lipstick is so cute. Yeah, never thought that. Never thought that. She knows who she married. Most I've ever thought was her lipstick was cute. She's cute as hell. She sure is cute. She's very cute and very, very, very sweet. You're you're an idiot. Do you have a gadget you would bring back from the gonna be an idiot? Because you are. Do you have a gadget that you would bring back? Pagers. Oh yeah, you said that. Oh no, but I mean we agreed that pagers weren't in the early 2000s.
SPEAKER_03:I'm gonna bring back the uh PSP.
SPEAKER_02:I feel and PSP is on here. I feel like I had a pager at that time. I'm pretty sure you did. I'm pretty sure that's it. If you still had a pager in the early 2000s, just because like y'all think. I don't know. I don't think we still they were around, but they weren't. So I I I did. Let me tell you why though. My mom would let me get one in school. And I wanted one. So Tiffany bought me one. So in two, so after we graduated, I had one and she had one. We just sit there page each other all goddamn day. I'm gonna find you a pager. Yeah, I want me one. Yeah, please. If you can find one that I can get turned on, please, because I do not want nobody calling me.
SPEAKER_04:They had this little pocket beer ball. Is that what you want?
SPEAKER_02:That's what I bring, but so when we've established this, you was dropping high all goddamn twenties.
SPEAKER_05:He's the hippie. Oh, I was wilding.
SPEAKER_02:Clearly. That's cool.
SPEAKER_05:Anytime I describe Kevin the people, it's like he's a good one. He's a hippie.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah. That's dope. Yeah.
SPEAKER_03:Well yeah, the I think I think I think I want the Dreamcast.
SPEAKER_02:You got more than one answer.
SPEAKER_04:I did have the Dreamcast. I wouldn't bring that shit back though.
SPEAKER_05:Dreamcast was when you look at now, no.
SPEAKER_04:Hell no.
SPEAKER_02:Who did Dreamcast? Like who made it?
SPEAKER_03:Sega. Sega.
SPEAKER_02:That was Sega. No, was it?
SPEAKER_03:It was Sega. It was Sega.
SPEAKER_02:I had one. I'm up here.
SPEAKER_03:No, strictly because you can hack that bitch and play the play save. So yeah, you're stupid.
SPEAKER_02:Pick one of these to bring back, y'all. Okay. So listen, it's a list. Dunkaroos 3D Doritos, Fruitopia, Kool-Aid Burst. I don't know what the fuck that is. Trick's yogurt, push pops, or hot Cheetos before they improved the formula. Fruitopia. None. Slide that Fruitopia back. What you mean? I I remember realizing that Fruitopia was gone. Ice cold. I remember that. Ice cold was fire.
SPEAKER_03:I can't eat none of that shit.
SPEAKER_02:I probably wouldn't even drink fruitopia now, though. That probably it probably tastes like straight sugar. It probably would. But ice cold fruitopia was fire. Can't nobody bring it up. Tell me what you would bring back if you went on a goddamn weight loss journey.
SPEAKER_05:None of them. Like I don't, I wouldn't miss anything. Yeah, it's like dumb. Yeah, I don't miss everything.
SPEAKER_04:Yeah. I don't miss none of that shit. That's why they discontinued that shit.
SPEAKER_02:I don't think I ate most of these things. Uh Push Pop is that early. That's the ice cream thing, or that's the thing. That's why I used to like those. I like the little push pop ice cream. And the Dunkaroos, I think I ate that before, but other than now I don't think I ate these things. I never had no tricks yogurt.
SPEAKER_03:I know the trick.
SPEAKER_02:If y'all remember bugles, I love bugles, yeah. And the commercial they had them on their fingers. I used to like bugles. And then you reminded me of the one the 3D Doritos.
SPEAKER_03:Those were good. The only snack I'd bring back from that time, I would I wish I can walk down to the liquor store on 74th and get a peanut patty. A what? A peanut patty. Peanut brittle? No, peanut patty.
SPEAKER_05:That sounds like some old LaFarm shit. Goddamn peanut patty. You say that I picture like black and white.
SPEAKER_03:The only place I know is I have to go back.
SPEAKER_02:The liquor store around the uh I can get three peanut patties for a nickel.
SPEAKER_03:The liquor store. The liquor store around the house from Carson still sells them. That's the last time I seen them.
SPEAKER_02:What but can you describe the snack?
SPEAKER_03:It's just like a it's it's like a it's like peanuts and some type of shit. I don't know. It's kind of like it's like peanuts and some type of like peppermint sweet shit.
SPEAKER_02:Peanuts and peppermint nicker?
SPEAKER_05:It sounds like some old niggas shit.
SPEAKER_02:That's your old, that's your papa coming out. That's my grandfather's favorite. I used to buckle up.
SPEAKER_05:Oh okay.
SPEAKER_02:So it's nostalgic for you. Yeah. Buy 10 at a time.
SPEAKER_05:Sweet. That's an awesome skit idea.
SPEAKER_02:Going to buy peanut peanut butter. What was I? What is a peanut patty? Peanut patty. Okay. I'm gonna show you. What what store um was your favorite hangout store, store to go in? Hot topic, Claire, Foot Locker, GameStop, limited to Warehouse. Okay, Warehouse Music. Warehouse music. Yeah, Warehouse music. Yeah, we're gonna call it that.
SPEAKER_05:Was it around the 2000s?
SPEAKER_00:Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
SPEAKER_04:Yeah, for sure. I'm not gonna lie. I'm gonna go back to like the big stores, like Target and shit. Because that's when they used to let you play the games. Same thing with Warehouse. They used to let you be like, just sit there and play. Are you buying? Oh, I'm not buying.
SPEAKER_02:Like the PlayStation and shit. You can play. That is true. I forgot about that. Yeah. Are we going back to the 90s right now, though? I feel like we're talking about the 90s. Target. These are all questions. Target, big as fuck. No, I'm saying, well, we girl, we don't win. We don't win. Oh, I've seen that before. I don't want to make one. No, I didn't know they had peppermint.
SPEAKER_05:My dad ate them.
unknown:Yeah.
SPEAKER_03:So they're good as shit.
SPEAKER_02:Oh, yeah, yeah. We don't win everywhere we could possibly go on this episode. And that's okay, because that's what makes a good episode. So it's nothing wrong wrong with that. Um, I'm gonna ask you guys one last question. If you can go back to the early 2000s and say something to yourself, what would you say? And don't hold yourself back. You say what you genuinely feel like you go if it's got something to do with your hand.
SPEAKER_03:It's not my hand. It's not my hand, but it's related.
SPEAKER_02:Okay.
SPEAKER_03:So now I know the real. Your feet? No, not my feet. Nigga, she's giving you the sign. Take the move, make the move. That is true. Make the move, nigga. That is true.
SPEAKER_05:I was oblivious.
SPEAKER_02:Wait, what's your wife? Yeah. What you mean? Like you I could have got a little earlier.
SPEAKER_03:I was done.
SPEAKER_02:That's your wife today. It don't matter.
SPEAKER_03:I would have got it earlier. Wanted it earlier.
SPEAKER_02:I feel you.
SPEAKER_03:Wow. As a young boy. Wow.
SPEAKER_02:That's cool.
SPEAKER_03:You just want to dip. Oh, geez.
SPEAKER_02:Oh, okay. I wasn't even there. I know she said go back.
SPEAKER_03:Of course, I can go home today and dip.
SPEAKER_02:Kevin. Kevin, please answer the question so he shut the fuck up.
SPEAKER_04:You know what? Honestly, I'd probably go tell myself, this is gonna sound weird as fuck. It's probably don't do the navy, just keep this comedy shit going.
SPEAKER_02:Okay.
SPEAKER_04:That's not weird.
SPEAKER_02:That's not that's not weird.
SPEAKER_04:I know I might have a little more motion then. Oh.
SPEAKER_02:You got more emotion. You got more emotion than you think.
SPEAKER_05:I mean, to be fair, you had a lot of motion in the Navy. That was yeah, it was a different motion. These are jokes. You should write them. Tired. Motion.
SPEAKER_03:Write that down. I am tired. What's wrong, dudes?
SPEAKER_02:I'm tired of y'all. Big fly.
SPEAKER_05:It'd be uh pay attention to the signs when they're given.
SPEAKER_02:Okay.
SPEAKER_05:Because I would just be oblivious to shit back then. I'll just but that's not happening. That's that was exactly what was happening. I just didn't pay attention to it.
SPEAKER_03:She was throwing it at me.
SPEAKER_05:Yes. A lot.
unknown:Oh, yeah.
SPEAKER_04:That's not that's not what's happening. That's what's happening. Oh, yeah, I would have been uh good thing I didn't though. I probably would have had way too many. I would have fucked up. I wasn't I could see that that's I wasn't good at the uh the exit route.
SPEAKER_05:There'd be a lot of uh that's for sure. You'd be like, man.
SPEAKER_03:KJ would be KJ and not Kindle.
SPEAKER_04:Be 11 of them motherfuckers.
unknown:Out there.
SPEAKER_00:Not out there.
SPEAKER_02:What about you, Sharon? What advice would you have? What would you go back and say to yourself? Um just don't be worried about other people. Like opinions, what they doing, how they feel, how what they timeline look like. Just don't be worried about that shit. That ain't got nothing to do with you.
SPEAKER_03:None at all.
SPEAKER_02:Because I guess because I've learned that as an adult now. Yeah.
SPEAKER_04:I don't really think freeing feeling, isn't it?
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, oh my gosh, yeah. Amazing. Like I have no, I could care less whether you're you could be a millionaire. That has nothing to do with me. Um, but yeah, I just wish I would have started that.
SPEAKER_03:I need you to pray that over my life, the millionaire part.
SPEAKER_02:All right, I do got an inside line. You'll listen to me. I would probably tell myself, girl, she is not your friend. Don't give your virginity to him and invest in in Amazon. Because, girl, I I would have I would have probably got back and tell myself to to um I didn't know we had multiple.
SPEAKER_05:I would have said she was a lot of shit like that.
SPEAKER_02:I would I would tell myself to better manage my money. Fuck Amazon, nigga.
SPEAKER_03:I would have about I would have had 20,000 Bitcoin when that nigga was like.
SPEAKER_04:I'm not even lying. We had that conversation. And I talked my roommate into not buying Bitcoin. He was like, hey, this Bitcoin shit is here. And I was like, that shit sounds like some video game shit. And like we just he was like, yeah, that's probably a bad idea.
SPEAKER_02:You know how mad I am right now? Like, yeah, no, for real. For real. I just feel like there's a lot of things culturally speaking that we don't learn as kids that I wish I could go back um and tell myself, like, hey, like, it's especially when it comes to like finances and how to manage yourself. It uh what you just mentioned, not worrying about what other people are doing. I don't think those things are really embedded in us. Because what's embedded us, embedded in us instead, because none of this shit is real, we are socially constructed. So the complete opposite of what I just said. We are socially constructed to pay attention to what everyone else is doing. Yeah, like that's crazy, right?
SPEAKER_04:It's all sales, everything's sales, selling everything to you. Yeah, it's all I must just be different teaching us to be in the job core. In my mind kind of works opposite.
SPEAKER_02:So, like I told you earlier, sometimes people come up to me and be like, Oh, I see you on the pockets or all you design. I'd be like, no, like because I in my mind, I didn't even think people, I knew people watched it, but I don't think I registered that people are like literally watching everything that we're saying, and and you're making your threw me off, your brand, and then people put you in that box. That's what I don't like. Yeah, no, and that's but the real deal. That's really how it is. Because legitimately, I don't say nothing. Uh-huh. He's waiting for you. I'm legitimately a very nice person, but because I talk so much shit, be have been the only girl here, yeah, that everybody just assumes I'm gonna just start talking shit every time they see me. I'm usually like, Hi, how are you? Nice to see you. Yeah, and they wait for me to you know to talk shit, but I I only do that to these three. Yeah, well, people want to put you, people that's I don't know. People are stupid. I'm sorry, but they do they always want to put you in a box. I don't like that. One thing that I can't stand is if I sit nobody really sees me unless it's social media outside of like a select few. And then when you run into somebody that you haven't seen in a long time, and then they give you your your whole everything based on your post. Yeah, oh I hate that shit. I cannot. I mean, I get you put out there what you put out there, but people like to put you in a box. But just call me under the post, baby. Don't come over and talk about how the coworker she used to come to my desk, like, girl. Oh my god, the co-workers are known. I'm so glad I don't have co-workers no more. I blocked that bitch right out the spot. She was talking to me and I was blocking her. I went from home because the baby. I'm gonna give fuck. They'll do just that. Like, oh my god, you got you and so late. I was in the bed when I posted that. That shit happened six hours earlier. You'd never totally see that. You'd never see another damn post. Fucking.
SPEAKER_05:Me and Dez got so wait, wait a minute. Here, let me show you.
SPEAKER_02:I hate that shit. Because blocking people in real time is. Because I talk shit, you know, and I make jokes and stuff on the internet. Y'all gotta know by now, like I'm a jokey ass person, so I be making jokes on the internet, and then niggas be taking it seriously. And I always say, that's why I always I play too much. Fuck is wrong with y'all. Okay.
SPEAKER_00:This has been this has been another episode of the heavyweight podcast. No, she always blame money. She was reacting to the shit she says.
SPEAKER_02:The lies. You guys multifaceted. You guys are lying, okay? You guys see this shit happening. They see what's going on.
SPEAKER_04:I have no idea what you're gonna do. Hey, we'd like to put propose a survey to you.
SPEAKER_02:Let us know who's telling you. As a matter of fact, as a matter of fact, look for my post for the question of the week, because that's gonna be the question of the week. Who started the shit? Me or y'all? No, I see it in him. Thank you. Shit! Y'all? Who? Y'all? It's like you're playing double Dutch. Well, she's telling me. What? No.
SPEAKER_04:Well, Des, yes. 100%. Yeah. Y'all?
SPEAKER_03:Look here. I'm just here to support Des and her journey. Des you want me to let you know let you in. I forgot to say earlier. Shout out Des to her her wicked nails. She's she's supporting the movie.
SPEAKER_02:You are like the three. Is that really that? Is that really? No. But it does remind you of that. It does put you in the mindset. Yes, thank you very much. Did you travel by bubble or broom? You are fucking.
SPEAKER_04:Wow. Okay. Threw that curve real quick. I was like, I didn't see that shit.
SPEAKER_02:I shouldn't have. I shouldn't have. He he put me into that one.
SPEAKER_04:Well, never mind. We don't have to, we don't have to ask anymore.
SPEAKER_03:I'll tell you the formula. By fucking broom. Did you see her face when she snatched old girl up? This has been another episode of the I didn't watch that.
SPEAKER_02:I didn't watch Wicked. I don't watch it like that.
SPEAKER_03:The clip of the uh of when they were promoting and the And the little Asian boy jumped on a girl. Yeah, I seen it. Would you see her face? I seen it.
SPEAKER_02:The way that the way it's like real life. The way they jumped on Ariana Grande and then black women. Oh yeah, I did see that. You know what? I I shared that and I said that black women are superheroes.
SPEAKER_03:When I saw her face, the black woman's face, the way she looked at him, I said, I don't know. I said, something's wrong with me because that shit turned me off. Oh, we've we have established that you like toxic shit.
SPEAKER_04:Right.
SPEAKER_02:That's not a toxic shit.
SPEAKER_04:It's not where my mind was at at all. I was just like, oh, she's a little bit.
SPEAKER_02:No, she looked at him like she's gonna rip his ass up.
SPEAKER_05:He gets turned on by toxic shit.
SPEAKER_02:He gets turned on by still. Okay, this has been another episode of the Heavyweight Podcast. Uh-uh, uh-uh. We're dad. Make sure you like, share, subscribe, all that shit. All that shit. Until next time.
SPEAKER_03:Everybody put it on Desert's broom. Put it right on my motherfucking broom.
SPEAKER_02:You call me a witch if you want to, nigga. Keep on fucking with me. I'm gonna put a fucking spell on you.
SPEAKER_05:Let him tell you the story about almost getting stabbed. And you tell me if me? Who almost got stabbed?
SPEAKER_03:Almost got stabbed this week, too. See?
SPEAKER_01:I'm done.
SPEAKER_04:That's rap, y'all. That's that's how she wrapped. So make sure you click like, subscribe. Tune in. We're on our screen platform. So until next time.