According To Wes

Juvenile x Boosie Fade

July 26, 2023 Wes/DeLaw Episode 7
Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Da Smifs and rolling in doe and Juve fade is way better than the Boosie fade. 

Speaker 1:

I feel like you um. I feel like you've been drinking.

Speaker 2:

Me drinking? No, of course not. No, no Water.

Speaker 1:

I mean, you've been drinking water I've been.

Speaker 2:

I told you I wasn't drinking for like 10 years. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

I was saying water. Why are you getting defensive? You've been drinking water. I'm saying it's been hot outside, you've been staying out.

Speaker 2:

You know, me and Mrs Smith, we've been drinking the alkaline water. You know, staying hydrated. Eight cups a day, Ain't that right babe. But she's putting up her oh sorry, she's putting up her one for the bloodline. So she said no, I'm putting up my fist for the nation of domination.

Speaker 1:

She dominating.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you know, shut up. Some days she gets her way, some days I get her, she, I get my way. But you know, in the grand scheme of it, you know we're a team, all right. Hey, babe, I need to get under the refrigerator. You might move in there for me?

Speaker 1:

Oh my gosh. Hello everyone. Welcome back to the episode According to West podcast. As always, godiva here.

Speaker 2:

Yes, you have Um the law.

Speaker 1:

Yes, yeah, you got me West and somewhere in the background my cat is, I know, like she's on.

Speaker 2:

You got the cat in your, in your layer.

Speaker 1:

No, I don't. She's upstairs, but Does not stop her from being needy.

Speaker 2:

Hmm.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, even though they sleep all day.

Speaker 2:

Has she figured out how to turn the door knob?

Speaker 1:

What You're getting out of. Turn a door knob.

Speaker 2:

My cat knows how to reach up and attempt to turn a door knob.

Speaker 1:

How tall is your cat and how short is your door?

Speaker 2:

For our door knobs are a standard length from the ground and that little nigga, he just he reaches up and he swipes at it. He doesn't have a thumb so he can't turn it, but I was like this will be a perfect time to make an invention for him, just to hit the thing so he can open a door.

Speaker 1:

You don't want a cat that just opened doors when the fuck they feel like it's not what you want.

Speaker 2:

Well, he only does it when we're in the bathroom, which is odd. But yeah, we've been in the bathroom, are you? Here is somewhere hitting the door, and my wife thought it was me one time trying to get into the bathroom. She's like what, what do you want? I'm like what are you talking about? And she's like why are you knocking on the door? I said that is the cat. The cat ain't knocking on the door. That's you trying to get. You trying to get my attention. Give me some privacy. I'm like give me some privacy. So I go to the bathroom the next morning and the cat gets up Like he's trying to push it. So he's trying to push the door open, but at the same time he's like hitting on the door, trying to get it open and trying to push it forward. And she was like I got out of the bathroom. She was like you were right, the cat does knock on the door. I said yes, I told you that. No, this is what I would have did.

Speaker 1:

I was like no, it doesn't, that was you and you were trying to get my attention. But you act like I don't need no privacy. I just would have told me Just wanted to walk out the room. That's how you get shit started. That's how you get shit started, Leo. Pretty much can stretch and touch Pretty much. We have a rule of thumb.

Speaker 2:

Here with what our cat is. If he can touch it, he can jump it, so he can stretch all the way up to the cabinets and touch the, not the camera, but the. I wouldn't call it like the, the flat surface, the counter. Yeah, you can. He can stretch to the counter. He can stretch to the counter. He can stretch to the counter. He can stretch to the counters and the counters I mean I'm not going to say the counter is a standard height, but they're pretty standard for a standard home, but he can stretch his paws to it and price. I'll tell you a cat though, so it's all cat. Ah, leo, leo is like, probably like this big.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but how is he getting to the top of the counter?

Speaker 2:

He is just how he is, how he stretches. He can, just he can just literally from his legs and stretch his arms up and touch on the counter. Yeah, I guess he just stretches. That's why he can't touch the door now. But you know, he can touch the door Now. He can touch the door now but he, he just kind of hits on it trying to push it open because he doesn't. I don't think he realizes doors open one way in houses.

Speaker 1:

True, yeah, you said in houses where else it opened up to it. Oh no, never mind, yeah, where else it opened up to it. I should have got the French doors that go both ways. It's actually fresh doors on the both ways.

Speaker 2:

The ones in the, those ones when you go to restaurants, when they were there by those in and out of.

Speaker 1:

Revolving doors.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I got those two. Nonetheless, he he hit. His routine is when I get up and I go into the bathroom he bangs in the door because he wants to come into the bathroom for me to run the sink water, not the sink with the bathtub water, so he can get some water.

Speaker 1:

So you're dehydrating the cat. He actually look dehydrated cats. Not a cool thing on either front. He's being inside a dehydrated cat and actually living with a dehydrated cat. Actually living with a dehydrated cat and then living with a dehydrated feline and then dealing with a dehydrated cat and feline. It's all not good. Nothing good comes about If that went over your head. It went over your heads, but you know the listeners are smart. I doubt it did.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I feel like we want to get smart listeners.

Speaker 1:

So I know I'm fucking with them. Yeah, listen to us. How smart are you?

Speaker 2:

Oh, we're too smart guys that say dumb shit.

Speaker 1:

No, I'm kind of smart, I'm kind of smart.

Speaker 2:

I'm smart between the times of right now, five, three to eight. So I get paid to be smart. I don't get paid to be smart. My regular job. This is.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's true, I got to be smart 24 seven.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, no, that sucks no it does suck. I don't know what I'll do if I had to be smart all the time. It's tiring.

Speaker 1:

I got the best of this shit. It's fucking tiring.

Speaker 2:

I get. I get to give my brain a rest where it's like all right, good, I ain't got to be smart, I just got to follow orders. And then, when I'm tutoring, I got to be smart.

Speaker 1:

Oh, it gets so crazy that I'm not even smart when I'm working. No, because I'm listening to educational podcast, learning this shit. Well, yeah, I am.

Speaker 2:

I am when I work out I listen to rap, like I used magic to album by Nas so and it was, it was better than magic one. That, and that's also because I didn't think magic the first album was that good. I thought it was. I thought he was just kind of building off of the hype of King disease one and two, yeah. And then he dropped magic and then it was kind of like, oh okay, it's, it ain't bad. It wasn't bad. It was better than a lot of albums that did come out. But it wasn't one of his better ones, and magic to there's a tad bit better. So I kind of like it. So now I'm kind of like all right, I see what you doing now. I see what you doing now. You make me want to anticipate King disease for Listen.

Speaker 1:

I'm sure it is a good project, but don't crucify me from what I'm about to say. I have not listened to any Nas past.

Speaker 2:

I am not your dog, Miss.

Speaker 1:

Still mad.

Speaker 2:

Still mad, oh yeah.

Speaker 1:

Well, you know, I was one of my best still mad. It might have been the one with the N word, right, oh, nigga, yeah, I might have listened to that, but that was like the last one. And it's not because I am not a non-swan, I am. I guess you can't say I'm a huge non-swan. I'm not a huge non-swan, it's just that, musically, we has just been.

Speaker 1:

You know, I got a backlog of stuff to listen to. I got my. I still got to listen to a big crit stuff I still got to listen to. It's a bunch of stuff I still got to listen to, because I like to sit and listen like. I want to just like. I don't want to just like, here you go, I just want to, like, you know, listen to a disposable, what Disposable? Disposable, I don't know what I'm saying. No, it's not, I don't think so. I don't want to just listen to it and just like be, you know, yeah, be done with it soon, I'm sure. Like that, yeah, like every now and then I still listen to, I still be listening to old shit, but I know it's a lot of good new shit though.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, cause that you know. You know who. I just started kind of kind of listening to a little bit because he'd been featured on a lot of the you know older rapper stuff was 21 Savage, I know, right I've been doing, man you should have been listening to him.

Speaker 1:

Well, the way 20, the way 21 Savage say pussy is so funny. We call it a pussy. It's so funny, I need to get that as a little thing on the soundboard. That shit is fucking hilarious. I already said that, yeah, cause I'm a plaza, pussy is funny when he talking about a girl from 21. Savage is saying it. Talking about a guy being disrespectful. Funny as shit too. Two guys Cause class with the P, class with the W and pussy is that was it. You know it's pussy.

Speaker 2:

I know I like plaza and I like pussy.

Speaker 1:

Put your pussy on the phone for $4,000. You remember that? Pussy on live for $4,000. That's, that's what got his Instagram taking down the first time. That's forever will be funny. I was on, I was live looking at that Cause I'm like all right, every time, boosie, get on live something crazy, put your pussy lips on live, I give you a thousand dollars.

Speaker 2:

Hey, boozy, keep it 100. Like. It is what it is with boozy Like you. At the end of the day, if boozy says it, boozy means it. So like they were talking about how boozy was like man, not fuck ti, but fuck ti Cause ti was like. Yeah, you know, I snitched on my dead cousin cause he was dead and he was like man, fuck all that. I was like what I thought, lord, you had to run back that apology.

Speaker 1:

You said what you had to run back that apology too. So he did boozy when I run back the apology. You had to run back what he said and he apologized.

Speaker 2:

Oh you could. Oh, yeah, cause ti came on and say hey look, I never snitched. And here's the paperwork that says I ain't never snitched. And I go, hey, but you know what, like I was telling my boss and my coworker, I said the whole no snitching culture.

Speaker 2:

It baffles my mind sometimes, you know, like people stick so hard to it, but they how's the nice way to say it when it comes down to the thick of it, they don't even follow it, did they have? So they stay snitching out anybody, like it's all when it, when it comes to dealing with civilians and dealing with the culture of the people that's in that life, oh, now you snitching, that's, that's whatever. Well, when it gets, they get sat in front of that judge and they looking at that time, a whole lot of them. They be singing like a Rita Franklin out there, right, they give up and then, even if they don't give it up, they be drowsing at you Like, well, you know that wasn't me, it was the people who I run with by saying who they was. But you know what I'm saying? They, they, they don't try to.

Speaker 1:

Exactly. I'm going to tell you like this, I mean stuff like when I see stuff like that, I think, god, well, the choices I decided to make it not run with people that was doing shit like that, because I love being a civilian. I don't want those, I don't want those problems, I don't want to. You know, should I snitch and have some resemblance of a life and be doing it? Cause I only got one, so it's kind of like I don't even want to put in that situation and I like I've said this shit before Anyone that tries to put me in that situation. I want definitely snitching, I'm definitely snitching.

Speaker 1:

And speaking of that, why Mellie getting out of jail? They did mistrial.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I know them.

Speaker 1:

I know that, nigga.

Speaker 2:

I was just, I was just telling my wife, I was just telling my wife, I said all of them. I said everybody allegedly under the something record label, they getting off.

Speaker 1:

They did. No, not they not getting off? I know Mellie is Mellie. No, that's the dude on Florida.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, no, it's a moment. There was a they. You didn't see the. Well, I thought well, I read the argue. I forgot what young thugs record label, why so?

Speaker 1:

Why so?

Speaker 2:

Oh, then I'm looking at. I was looking at the wrong record label, Whoops.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, probably so. No, mellie. Uh, even I don't even know the story that ends, and I just know that he's accused of killing two of his friends and they try to make it seem like they was planning to kill him and his mom and he got to them first. Don't know the ends and outs, that's all I know.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, I remember that story. I remember that story.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, mistrial, and I'm like, well, boy, I don't listen to the, I don't listen to the that type of games with rap anyway.

Speaker 2:

So when, when, when you get a mistrial like that because my homie, he got a mistrial on on, on that for guns it comes down to a technicality they could have. They could have found the smallest. Didn't didn't matter how small it was, it could have been that, huh, the name one of the thing wasn't right, or it could be the smallest thing. They probably found the smallest thing. That was a mistrial because of some sort of error that they did in, like logging evidence or something they did in the procedure of arresting them. Mind you, this dude's been, this dude's been locked up for what? Like six years now five, six years.

Speaker 1:

So it was like three, it's been six.

Speaker 2:

Well he would. The crime happened 2018.

Speaker 1:

I don't know. I, like I said, I wouldn't even follow in that for real, I just I was looking at something that was like, oh, mistrial, I'm like, hmm, that's interesting.

Speaker 2:

But if you know, if there's ever, if there's ever a mistrial, it's a clerical error, it's something on the prosecution side that they didn't do right, something on the law enforcement side that they didn't do right, because that means a mistrial just means someone fucked up.

Speaker 1:

What evidence wasn't substantial? Right, and that's what I think, that's what they called based off that they couldn't have any substantial evidence and I think people didn't come forward if they quote unquote seen something or whatever, having like no witnesses, type shit.

Speaker 2:

But that's that whole snitching. No snitching calls are like the civilians are scared to step up because they don't want to get got.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that should remind me of. I think it was a chef G. It might have been out. It was someone. I probably don't know what it is, but some young dude, and they were. I was asking him I'm like oh, the no snitching, and if someone killed your mom and you know who did it, would you snitch? And just what a straight face. He was like no, he said you killed your mom. You went, switch you snitch. He was like no, why would I snitch? He's like listen, if they killed my mom, they gonna be dead. I felt that I'm like why am I snitching to send you to jail? You need to die. He ain't say that. He's like they gonna be dead.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 1:

He's like if you killed my mom's, there's no reason for me to snitch, because I'm gonna kill you, ain't say kill your mom, I'm just saying, I'm throwing it out, I'm just saying, like he said, they would be dead.

Speaker 2:

He implied he was about he was going on a rampage. Nah, he implied it. He ain't say he implied.

Speaker 1:

I just don't want to be put in that situation.

Speaker 2:

I don't need to, but I'm snitching, no snitching.

Speaker 1:

I don't believe in a. I don't live that life. I ain't got to worry about that. But on lighter news, COVID is in the deer population now and they affected Lisa three humans over the last year.

Speaker 2:

They only venison.

Speaker 1:

Oh dear bites. I don't fucking know man. Like how many people you think COVID is still around. Do you honestly think COVID is still around, or you think the number is so low that it's like we're not sure? I put it this way Because I've been free balling it out there with no mask and then these stores and shit it, only because it's been like 200 degrees outside.

Speaker 2:

I put this way. On the last COVID call I was on, they said blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah blah blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah blah, I put it this way when I was filming, I worked for for everybody. You know, at all costs I could put them in the grooves. I'm right at this ball but honestly, water isn't the biggest跑 hour race and you know the medical got the vaccination card yeah.

Speaker 2:

In the medical field is now making their money back off of COVID. Because I'm still a firm believer that COVID was created because it had started to become a very known thing that I'm not getting a flu shot, and every time I get a flu shot I get the flu. And I had no flu shot in 20 years and I ain't got no goddamn flu Right. So now they said, well, we got to create something that scares the shit out of niggas. And lo and behold, here's COVID that also has the flu in it.

Speaker 1:

Why can't it just be the simple mistake of it was studying? Some people at the lab got sick. They spread it to somebody else.

Speaker 2:

That's not how. That's not how these things work.

Speaker 1:

But, but it is how these things work.

Speaker 2:

Look they the word where this, where this particular facility was it was? It was in China, next to a free market. Yes apparently it leaked out.

Speaker 1:

No, what I'm saying is I think people just if it would think about early COVID and shit. Not, I think, not I know, but logically, the way I see it, it was very contagious, probably got leaked into a free market because I don't know what, but it came from that lab. There's new reports saying that. Yeah, they try to cover it up like new, new reports and some of our reports within the last two months.

Speaker 1:

I mean, so you know my whole thing is, you're going to keep saying this one thing, and that ain't true. I don't believe it was one of those. I don't believe it was one of those things, for, oh, we can get somebody on more. You know something stronger than some, stronger than the flu. Yeah, it doesn't make any sense, because we were getting those COVID vaccines for free, so it doesn't really matter.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, well, you can remember like not people. So there wasn't people that died. I mean, there was people that died from COVID, but a lot of people who died they contracted COVID but had complications from something else. I guess I see what you said.

Speaker 1:

They probably they didn't die. Covid didn't just take them out and they was healthy. There was other things.

Speaker 2:

It was other things that that went into it. So, like like Scarface, when he got it it fucked him up so bad that he almost died. But if fuck this kid needs up so bad because he had diabetes.

Speaker 1:

This kid was already fucked up.

Speaker 2:

Right, so now he, now he's on, now he is actually on dialysis, so it is so and but. But think of it on the other side of slim thug got it, and slim slim thug got it. And some thug, he was like yeah, you know, you know, I, you know, at first I didn't even know I had it and then I kind of I had a little bit of shortness of breath and I was like man, maybe I do got it. He said he started taking this. He already takes his turmeric and black seed oil, so it didn't affect him too much.

Speaker 2:

But he took a test and said yeah, he had it. So he just kind of stayed in the house, drink his tea, do his regular stuff, his what you know, everything else. So it affected a lot of people differently, but a lot of times I think the people who we saw that were like, like, think about, the first people who got it in the US were like old folk, people in the 60s, 70s, 50s, all survived it over in Oregon, Chicago and California and Texas, and then, once he got to New York, all of a sudden the numbers just go skyrocketing, right, yeah, and you also got to think about Now, New York was crazy.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but you got to think about the people who were dying from this. Well, a lot of times weren't people who I'm not going to say all of them, but some of them weren't taken seriously and they took it like, all right, well, I got COVID, just the flu on steroids, Let me keep drinking and smoking and everything else People who had bad stuff, people who didn't know they had things going on with them. They were dying at an alarming rate, All right. And a lot of them that were dying already had pre-existing things that were going on with them. And since New York is stacked on top of each other like, of course you're going to have billions of people catching COVID not billions, but you're going to get a bunch of thousands of people catching it, because you practically stack New Yorkers on top of each other.

Speaker 2:

So, yes, you're going to get a bunch of people catching COVID. And then you know, even though I think a lot of times those numbers that they said that they had, or people that were dying from COVID, I think they were, they were spiked up, I think they were taking normal deaths and saying it was COVID deaths and I think they were doing that across the country just to make COVID sound serious enough for us to go and get those COVID shots. Yeah, that's just. That's just my, my perspective of it, because I'm like For someone to die of COVID.

Speaker 2:

A lot of times when they die from COVID, they die of shortness of breath in their lungs being ripped to each other and closing them up, and then by the time you can heal from it. You've done got so much fluid in your lungs from the COVID. Try, like COVID, it grabs your lungs and it tries to reach itself. So you grab one lung here, one lung here, and then we multiply yourself to grab to each other, to close up the lungs and people are just dying from not being able to breathe and dying in their own fluid, like that was very few and far between. A lot of them just died from complications of their regular diseases that they had.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

So you chalk that up, those regular disease deaths, you chalk that up to a COVID loss and now you have your seven million, seven billion people die from COVID to make it the worst Pandemic in the world's history. You know, I mean that's really, I mean that's really, in my opinion that really happened. But I could be wrong, I could just be a conspiracy theorist.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, come on, we'll know what we won't know. Well, our grandkids will probably know, and then, by the time that happens, we won't give a fuck about it. Yeah, because it'll be an ass. They'll be like they did that to y'all.

Speaker 2:

Like yeah, well, we gonna have to, yeah, man.

Speaker 1:

Listen, I hope I ain't talking. I hope I ain't talking like I don't want that old man voice.

Speaker 2:

Come on, fuckers, got us man.

Speaker 2:

They put some shit up in the air. Yeah, they tried to kill us and we thought it was just trying to kill the niggas, but really they just try to kill everybody the four niggas, the rich niggas. They said that Conrad was bad for niggas, so we just got to be out, kill everybody to get the shit on track. I got to explain to them. That's how I got a state job. Now my the person who was before me, did not die of COVID. She quit because they couldn't give her a raise and move to Florida.

Speaker 1:

But I got you.

Speaker 2:

But in retrospect that'll make a good story though, but that's how I got my job. Niggas died from COVID. So much of what I said. He done got COVID three times. I'm like shit nigga. He's like man. I'm 50. I got three times like damn, shut Damn.

Speaker 1:

That's a lie. You was out here, out here, but I don't even want to know what it feels like to have it for one time.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so, but we did go and see Capone Um Friday. The media yeah.

Speaker 1:

You from DC, right? No, Capone from DC. I'm thinking about Earthquake. Earthquake from DC. Yeah, I don't think Capone's from DC, but Capone's from um. I don't know, I don't know.

Speaker 2:

I don't know. I don't know.

Speaker 1:

I don't think Capone's from.

Speaker 2:

I don't remember Capone funny as shit, though yeah, we didn't know he was so funny. So I was looking at clips of them and I was like hi, pretty funny. My wife was like how I don't know if I won't. It was like, uh, we got a free ticket to the Baltimore comedy factory but we didn't realize they were practically giving out free tickets to the whole thing and I'm like wait. And so in my head I'm like wait, you're giving out free tickets to Capone Because they want you to drink. Right, that bill was $70.

Speaker 1:

At Capone, for I got some you know some points off the you know everybody tab and shit.

Speaker 2:

Look, you know and you know, when people go to the bars with a Commie Fatter, they drink, they eat, they do everything. So we got two drinks. I got a trash can that cost me like 24. My wife got like a strawberry, daiquiri type shit. That was 16. That kind of is our two drinks. Okay, well, both we both got something that counted for two drinks so we didn't want to have to order two separate drinks so we just got something that counted for two drinks. So off the back that's already 40. Then we got two orders of fries that were $8. Okay.

Speaker 1:

Not balling. I keep forgetting y'all rich. Nigga, we ain't rich no y'all rich Because a lot of those are that bill.

Speaker 2:

I tried not to flinch.

Speaker 1:

Y'all rich.

Speaker 2:

Look, I looked at that bill. I was like damn you, you know like, you know how, like a rich nigga, no what do you know when? Kevin Hart, when I?

Speaker 1:

was like yeah, yeah, yeah, 50 something years old, 60 something, like damn you. You know I'm my bad Like motherfucker.

Speaker 2:

Look, that's how I felt when I looked at the bill. I was like damn you Shit. My wife looked at me. I said my bad, my bad, I'm sorry. So what's that? I said nothing. Nothing, I got this, I got this.

Speaker 1:

And I'm looking at this motherfucker like God damn you, you got, you got, you got to. You got to practice on your screaming internally Shit like I do.

Speaker 2:

I was hurting. On the inside I was hurting. I was like oh God Damn.

Speaker 1:

Oh, you hit the well, let me go to the bathroom before we leave. And you just cursing up a fucking storm. We're waiting at my fucking bathroom Like hey look.

Speaker 2:

Can you fucking order a motherfucking shit? Hey look, a real live. If we weren't, if Capone wasn't that funny he was funny as shit you would have threw your food at him. Nah, I would have been like hey babe, I'm gonna say I'm gonna go to the bathroom, oh no, Then you come to the bathroom and then we just gonna, we just gonna walk out that bitch, no, and keep that shit rocking.

Speaker 1:

No, I don't, I've never.

Speaker 2:

I've never. I've never left the Baltimore County factory to go use the bathroom. So my wife is going out use the bathroom and came back. And so I never, I never thought to ask her, like, when you leave out to go use the bathroom, do they watch you Like do they see if you go down the stairs? No, come back, yeah, cause, look, we could have did that for Faiza on love. That's the game.

Speaker 1:

Listen, I think it's a hater. I don't know that motherfucker, but every time I see him it just sounds like he's just hate, and I only know what you hate. No, you know what he's hating on.

Speaker 2:

People getting money yeah.

Speaker 1:

His parenthood money ain't coming in. Look, Friday money ain't coming in and I'm not trying to disrespect them, but it's just like every time I see him.

Speaker 2:

He mad because he fucked up. He left his wife, or his wife left him. However, whatever happened, okay.

Speaker 1:

So now I don't know these things, I'm just talking about this. I'll be saying all that, and now he got to pay that money to that motherfucker, because now they ain't the government.

Speaker 2:

He got a baby mama, who he's like God damn it. I got this young bitch that I thought was going to be cool, but no, this bitch is ratchet as fuck. And he got a kid he already bought, a hundred and eight years old and shit, he's just like man. Let me just get on tour. I can't do this. I got people all this shit. He's just hating on, he hating on his life and the life. Okay, you're giving me perspective now, I didn't.

Speaker 1:

I didn't know all that. I did not know all that. I didn't know all that. I did not know all that.

Speaker 2:

I thought it was just like I don't know, I just thought he woke up one day.

Speaker 1:

It was like I feel like he's like I feel like he's the day I thought that's what it was he going through it.

Speaker 2:

He was up there, he was just talking about.

Speaker 1:

He was like he. He called his baby. Oh, you seen that. You seen the his performance. So that's how you know that. I thought you was doing your, your Google's and then your research and shit. You know, face on love.

Speaker 2:

ain't that important in my life For me to Google the motherfucking.

Speaker 1:

I got you.

Speaker 2:

It's like hey, look, you want to. You like face on love. What have to be the most funniest nigga in the world for me to be like? Oh baby, we're going to go see him, let's look up some shit on him, not face on love.

Speaker 1:

First listen, it'd be funny. You ain't got to look up anything on it. If you looking up stuff, you trying to figure out the motherfucking funny.

Speaker 2:

Hey look, I didn't even know that nigga was a comedian yeah.

Speaker 1:

I knew that.

Speaker 2:

Like when she said we're going to go see face on love, I said you talking about big per, I mean big one. She was like, yeah, we're going to go see face on love. I was like I think it's comedian.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Look, I was shocked.

Speaker 1:

I was like that's what, so, but that's what most everybody did back in the 80s. One into the 90s comedian slash actor. It's a lot of those, Because everybody you know deaf comedy jam, everybody was there to make they pivot, everybody. And Eddie Murphy, everybody wanted to do the Eddie Murphy thing and Richard Carr thing. Oh, they was comedians and they turned to actors. They were doing their thing.

Speaker 2:

But Richard Pryor and Eddie Murphy were different, they were funny. They were funny.

Speaker 1:

No, no, just just, that was just funny. Face on love yes.

Speaker 2:

I'm not saying they weren't funny, but they were funny. But their productions for their, for their comedy shows were really erratic anywhere. So the trans, the transition from them being comedians to actors, was easy for them. You got guys who were way better at being comedians than being acted like. These young flies wanted the wonder ones. I'm like, just do it, just do it comedy, because now you could do.

Speaker 1:

I've seen them do good in both.

Speaker 2:

I've seen them do OK in both. He's done OK in both. Like you got somewhere, he's, he's either he's kind of funny, you got some way. He's trying to be a gangsta and be serious. The other, try to be serious is like you. He'd been typecast before he can be casted Like you. We haven't even seen the full range of DCM fly because DCM fly, so our race, the DCM fly, wants to be outraged. But once he gets past that phase of where he doesn't want to be outrageous, where you got a while everything, then we can see if he's really a good actor.

Speaker 1:

You know you're right. You know I've only seen him in a couple of things. I thought it was dope, but then again, sometimes the bar for me with certain movies and things is not that high.

Speaker 2:

Nas is not like anything that easy Like he will. He was in that this Christmas with the, I think he did.

Speaker 1:

I think he did good.

Speaker 2:

And I thought he did good in it, but it was still. It was just like it was enough where they was like oh, don't do too much. Don't do too much, Perfect Good, all right, get off the screen. We need to put the real actors in, like that's how I felt, like that was like because he was very spotty in that movie. It was just like. I hate these.

Speaker 1:

I mean you're not going to, but you got to think about it too. The cast like people be having any contract. I need this amount of screen time. I want to get paid this. This is a net. He's not an actor. So you're not going to get top building, not top building, but you're not going to get top priority over all those legends. Quote unquote there, yeah, oh, I was in that goddamn movie, yeah, and he had a show and he had a shorter exposure than Omar. I mean then DC young five.

Speaker 2:

Omar Omar Epps is a is is an actor and a lot, a lot of times, with these actors even like the one like Samuel Jackson when he does this cameos a lot in mind, I don't think Samuel Jackson turns down any. They say, hey, we want you to do this role. Hey, he goes in his head, something triggers. Like Nick, I used to be homeless. Sure, I'll do what you want me to do. We just want you to get fries to the nigga. All right, cool, how much you paying me?

Speaker 1:

Because he spoke on that. He was like, you know, he used to be an addict and stuff like that and him being busy and him, you know, always working, as you know, he's able to, like fight those demons to a degree with that. So that's why he's in a bunch of movies, right, speaking of that, I was just watching what what's secret invasion and shit it's actually not too bad. Some people don't like it. I think it's dope. I think it's all right.

Speaker 2:

It's all right for what it is, but for what it is and for who they don't have in it, it's fine. Yeah, because they don't have the secret. Invasion is a fantastic for thing.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

You know, because you know the fantastic for dealt with the scroll and all that.

Speaker 1:

It wasn't it wasn't everybody else.

Speaker 2:

And send it in mind. You, nick Fury did deal with the scroll, but that's because Nick Fury deal with the whole Marvel universe. So, yeah, a lot of shit. Yeah, he wasn't the main person in the secret war. That was the fantastic for, yeah, and I think a lot of people who who've been watching it, they are trying to figure out, like so, when you're going to put the fact, when you're going to come up with the Marvel fantastic they just spoil you and they can't take.

Speaker 1:

you know it's still a decent up Program is better than a lot of shit out here. It's shit. I'm going to say like this this shit made me go watch a Captain Marvel and that shit been out for what three years. But watching that made me watch that, and I found out that Nick Fury driving 96 in Paula.

Speaker 2:

Yes, he does. We're talking about the black Nick Fury.

Speaker 1:

I mean, that's the only one I recognize, that's the only one I'm talking about David Hasselhoff Nick. That's the only one I'm going to say. You call it a mystery. You say that many reasons. Let's say we all. Jackson one is the only one I recognize anyway. I don't know no other ones.

Speaker 2:

That's the only one I know to, even though I've seen other ones, but I mean, I'm just saying that's the only one I acknowledge.

Speaker 1:

You know what?

Speaker 2:

I know Jackson as Nick Fury. I acknowledge him. He is my acting chief.

Speaker 1:

How's the work life?

Speaker 2:

You know work life, you know. You know I work with a former Georgetown, whole year, Of course, and like I told you, it's as much as my wife wants me to go to the what did that come from why? She wants to do that Because that's where she's at. She left the school system, oh, congratulations. Yes, the school system, and now she is ADA specialist.

Speaker 2:

So I don't know, that is pretty much. You know all those things you see with the wheelchairs on it. She makes sure that those guidelines are being met and that the people in her, in her department or in her Well, ocean type shit, so ocean is his own thing. That deals with warehouses. So, when the state talks about departments, so she's in a, she's in a department, so she's in the department of public service and correctional services, I'm in. So each department has Identical things. So she deals with employee relations that aren't accommodating to people who have disabilities. Okay, I got you and I deal with emergency operations, which also deals with the public, not the public that has disabilities, not being able to be able to get into certain places. So I, so we both deal with the same thing. I deal with it on a different scale than she does. She deals with her population. I deal with the general population across the state of Maryland.

Speaker 1:

So you are rich? No, I just got all like you there.

Speaker 2:

As a stravagan, as it sounds, for for my job I make 40 grand less than she does, so she's rich.

Speaker 1:

She's rich Because look, look, your money is her money, her money is her money.

Speaker 2:

That's bullshit. Look because I put this way If If I made her money, I would not be tutoring, I would hire To my kids. But I need all that money. You know what I'm saying. So that's why we feel like, oh, you risked.

Speaker 1:

No, no, no. Look, one of these motherfuckers is rich and it's the cat.

Speaker 2:

I'm able to do. What I can do is because of the business. My wife has a spending habit like she's rich.

Speaker 1:

I don't have a rich. Listen, I'm going to tell you like this A lot of women do. And then they look at us like we crazy, like we don't want to put. The bill Was on shift that they then slacked off on because they didn't spend too much money. But let me spend too much money, the mortgage ain't getting paid, right. But that you spend so much money, I got to figure out how I'm going to get you flow to you know next week because you want to buy extra pair of shoes.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 1:

So every guy goes to that. One of my other homies. That's shit. Right now, my homie, his wife went and got a car without him knowing 2021. So you know, that note is like 40, some 50.

Speaker 2:

Well, I mean, I'm just proud of my life at this point. She finally got what she wanted, that's right. She blinds herself out. Don't worry, I didn't make sure the cameras out this way. You don't want to get me a kiss, you sexy little thing. And she's lost 10 pounds. He's over there looking like a whole meal and a half. You know what I'm saying? Look, she got me eating healthy. She's got me cooking green beans and bone and chicken bone broth To give it flavor with no salt.

Speaker 1:

That ain't gonna help if you keep seeing you to drink the way you drink.

Speaker 2:

Hey look, today is my last day to drink until next week, so yeah, I got you. Hey, look, look, look, look, look, look, look, look, look, look. I no longer drink 60 drinks a week, so that's that's.

Speaker 1:

I didn't even know that was the number. That's not the number, is it?

Speaker 2:

No, I was drinking 70 drinks a week. I was drinking 10 drinks a night.

Speaker 1:

Yeah it was wrong. We had this discussion about how you asked that you drink your, your stories of drinking something like war stories.

Speaker 2:

Why do you do?

Speaker 1:

this 10 drinks a night.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, look, I was doing 10. So I was doing 10 drinks a night before I met my wife. I was doing 10 drinks a night after I met my wife and then, when the pandemic started, I was doing more than that. I was finishing a bottle a night when the pandemic started. It was pretty bad and like, like I was to the numb. I was to the numb and a an adult adult, like somebody's, somebody's mom, for what that guy grank is, because she. So what ended up happening was she had been teaching for so many years and then in the school system she was in. They said, well, we noticed you don't have a certificate. And she said, well, I've been tutoring for 30 years. And it was like, well, you need to take the.

Speaker 1:

You know the practice and so they made her take the practice to be a tutor.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they made it take the practice because she's a tutor, no, because she was teaching. So it was my ex-girlfriend's mom, so what? Are you doing? I was like sure you know. You know I did what I do. Which one, though Not the most recent one, it was like the one of my school.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

So it was her mom and she called me. She's like I need some help. I'll say I'll say something All right, cool, I'll help you inside Charger, but that whatever I told my wife, my wife, dude, and she was like all right, whatever, I mean, you know how it is, you know? Yeah, I think you had to trust me.

Speaker 1:

I do, but I do.

Speaker 2:

Well, you know, she passed the practice, everything was.

Speaker 1:

Gucci.

Speaker 2:

That's what's up. That's when I realized I was a real tutor.

Speaker 1:

I mean, you're getting paid. Ain't that listen any time you're? Gonna pay for your skills, you'll be officially that. So for all those women that be like oh, I only stuck with that man for money once. Nah, you a hoe. It takes you to do it once and that is what you are. If you get paid for it, that's what you are.

Speaker 2:

Hey, look, it was funny because that's what I said to my wife. I was like because the first person I tutored for the practice didn't pass it. So I kind of was actually the first two people I tutored for the practice didn't pass it and I was like, when she called me, it was like, look, I need to pass this test.

Speaker 1:

I was like all right, my bad name.

Speaker 2:

I mean, it's not good in these streets. Third time was a charm. You know, I was like and she passed and I was happy and the funny part was she was like I'm proud of you, I'm proud of you.

Speaker 1:

But here's the thing maybe she passed because she actually had more experience than the other fucking two people and they probably weren't serious.

Speaker 2:

Well, you know. You know what the practice isn't about. You're teaching ability.

Speaker 1:

No, no, no, no. I mean, like she's, she had to have been knowing some math and shit, like that. So what I'm saying is the other two people probably wasn't serious with their studying. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. But she she bought Osmosis. She could probably just pick this shit up and just need to improve upon.

Speaker 2:

Right, because, it matter of fact, she says that she didn't even answer all the questions. She didn't. She had, she didn't, she ran out of time and I said, well, you know, I've never taken a practice before. Okay, and I'm pretty sure that as long as you reach a certain number as far as, like the points of concern, you pass.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but she didn't know she had reached that to be answering all the questions.

Speaker 2:

Well, she found out at that point where it was like oh shit, I passed. She called me, I passed. I was like you passed.

Speaker 1:

I was like damn, oh, it's on the computer. They let you know by the points you get.

Speaker 2:

No, she found out they. No, they told her after the fact. It's on paper. Oh, I'm sorry.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

It's kind of like like when I took the insurance test. You take it on paper. No, no, I'm sorry. The insurance test, you take it online, but on for the practice, you take it on paper. You give it to them, they grade it right then and then boom and that's it. It's not like the GED, where you gotta wait for your results.

Speaker 1:

I'm not about the GED.

Speaker 2:

Me neither, but I've tutored for the GED, so Did they pass. We'll just say we just gonna say We'll just say for the young folk that are listening to this podcast.

Speaker 1:

Staying fucking high school. Staying fucking high school like Her, ged is a lot harder than actual high school.

Speaker 2:

The actual GED is not that bad. Now, mrs Smith, you are not in this conversation unless you're coming down in this conversation. Okay, she said it is. She said it is. Yeah, that's what I meant too, but this way, from what I've seen, for the math portion okay, for the math, you don't fucking math major, you don't count, You're not even qualified to say that the math portion For the math portion.

Speaker 1:

You're a math major than math. You don't count.

Speaker 2:

For the math portion. You need to ask the no, you need to ask the motherfucker that struggled.

Speaker 1:

It'd be like that motherfucker was hard because of this and this and this. Regular people, not someone that counts in their sleep.

Speaker 2:

I mean she was more of a outlier because she there was other things that happened in the course that she wasn't able to learn all the math. Like a lot of people that take that GED test, they at least have up to 11th grade year of like doing shit that the test becomes easy. She didn't have that same opportunity when you know English and all that other stuff, it came natural to her. But math didn't come natural to her because of other things that went on in her life as far as learning the math. That's why I say it like a lot of times, like people who I know have taken the GED and passed it, they say, oh, and I was one of the easiest tests ever because it was the same shit they learned the first three years in high school. They just didn't feel like going to school no more and they just took the GED.

Speaker 1:

No, those are outliers too, because they just didn't feel like going to school. That's it. Like you for real, for real, you only need three years of math. So what are we saying? Well you know, now it's four years, I mean, but still. You know, yeah, I know what you're saying, like if you can get three years worth of math questions right and there's this one year that you don't get right. I'm pretty sure you're still passing that motherfucker Mm-hmm. So you know.

Speaker 2:

It's you know.

Speaker 1:

Listen, I heard it was hard. I have nothing to go by that off of, but other people's opinions on the matter, Right right, right it's easy. I would say it's probably easy to some degree.

Speaker 2:

Like I said to me to me and just me, looking at a lot of practice tests, and I've looked at all portions of the practice tests and to me it is not bad. But also I also looked at it after being out of high school, after or right before I got out of college and graduated. So to me a lot of it wasn't hard. But looking at it from like a 15, 16, 17, 18, 19 year old perspective, it could be a hard test, you know, especially if you haven't learned all those things. So my view of the GED test because I have all those skills I have learned through college and high school to me it is easy. Now, if I didn't have those skills, who's to say that it is an easy test? You know what I'm saying. Who's to say that I would be able to pass that test Right? You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

So it all depends on a lot of things. You get a lot of people who you know people take that. Like my stepfather. He got GED. He went and took a whole test to do that. You know what I'm saying. Because he dropped out of school, because he wanted to go into the Marines and he had to go to the army and do all the stuff, and he was looking on his own since 16. So you know like it's different for a lot of people.

Speaker 1:

I wonder. I know my mom would probably never let me do it, but if I went back in time I'll probably ask her like yo, I'm going to 10th grade. I feel like I can, I feel like I can get out of high school and pass the GED. Would you let me? I already answered my question because my mom was always under the assumption GED was less than the high school diploma, even though it means you have the credentials people might look at it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, people might look at you differently when they see GED than a high school diploma, so she was not going to allow me to do that, so I already answered my question.

Speaker 2:

I ain't look, I ain't gonna lie, I wholeheartedly. I asked my mom that question, did you? I told her straight up and I said look, ma, because it was at a time when school wasn't going good for me and I was getting really bad grades.

Speaker 1:

And was it not going good? Because you just wanted to play basketball and chase girls? Because that was me.

Speaker 2:

It was more like play basketball, chase girls and work. So I was trying to do a lot of things and I thought I had a better career. I got yeah, this is when I was 16. This has taken it back to episode one, season one, for something. Oh, yeah, yeah, you know what I'm saying. I had the idea that I work at McDonald's, right, and if I work at McDonnell's, that's a stable job, mcdonald's ain't going nowhere and I could work my way up and become a store manager, make a decent amount of money, save up and I could own my own McDonald's. That was the idea. Okay, at 15, or that's the same age my son is now. That's how that was my idea at that time. Now, my job also wasn't getting good grades, so that was the idea of my mind. I was like, well, shit, I didn't get good grades anyway. Oh, fuck it, I'm gonna just do this, yeah, and if things have panned out that way, right that I decided to really, when.

Speaker 1:

I say I, you would have had six McDonald's by now, feeding the poison to your black community. Probably I'm joking.

Speaker 2:

No, no, no. But that's real though, Because looking back on it and that was a real conversation I had with mom was like your mom said that about feeding that bullshit to her.

Speaker 2:

No, no, no, she was like if you, if she pretty much she was like if your choice is to leave high school, to go and leave high school, then here's what's gonna happen You're going to work, you're gonna pay bills, you're going to pay rent, You're gonna do this, this, like it was a whole list of things Pretty much by the time she was done, mapping out exactly what it was I was gonna have to pay and do. That was my whole check. Yeah, and I was like God damn, like, so that means, in order for me to even have a paycheck, I was going to have to really drop out of school.

Speaker 1:

Or do what some of us never really thought to do Start slinging dick to some old lady.

Speaker 2:

Well, you didn't know what that's 16 years old.

Speaker 1:

I never even thought about. But let's say, here's the thing I never thought about that, but I've always heard of guys doing that to be like a little 40 year old hood rat Like she just want. She just want attention and some dick and maybe watch for her kids or through her kids while she go do shit. And you got a place to stay.

Speaker 2:

Look, I'm not trying to get ushered out here, okay, because you know, that's how you catch herpes, herpes like ushered it.

Speaker 1:

Oh my God. Allegedly we don't know. If that shit true, what are you?

Speaker 2:

doing. He's making women sign disclosure agreements that they fuck or that he has herpes, and they agree to fuck them. Nigga got herpes.

Speaker 1:

So here's the thing, here's my, here's my view on that and that's allegedly here's my view on that. If I'm making a woman sign an NDA, okay, you gotta think about ushered During that time. That's when people was starting to get caught up with the oh, he did this, this and that Back then something like that would totally ruin his career, and that's before.

Speaker 1:

social media would totally ruin his career. Now them adding to possibly adding the extra sauce on it. It was because of this, this and this. Why still do it if you know the motherfucker has that? If that's the case, so that's why I really just don't believe it.

Speaker 2:

I believe it and only reason. I believe it. Okay, and it has nothing to do with that usher done fucked every woman in the world because he usher is usher.

Speaker 1:

What does that mean? You don't do it at all.

Speaker 2:

Usher is usher, so we, and usher is a man.

Speaker 1:

And so I know that yeah, I hope so.

Speaker 2:

Okay, and I know that once you.

Speaker 1:

Hold on. You said the man or a man, A man, I ain't mean this industry like that Usher. I thought he said the man. Yeah, he's a man.

Speaker 2:

Once you get to a certain status and these women are throwing it at you, these things be bad and it's like I wouldn't be a real nigga. Not the fuck, the bitch. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

Oh my God, now you sound like Kevin Geese.

Speaker 2:

Look, I wouldn't be a real nigga, not the fuck the bitch Like she, bad as shit. But these are the same like I'm not saying that he got herpes from fucking one of these random jeans. I'm not saying he got herpes from what I'm just saying. At some point he encountered somebody that had it. That didn't say shit to him and when he had his outbreak then he said, all right, well, look, I'm usher and I don't want no bitch talking about some. Oh, this ain't got herpes, I ain't fucking because he gonna still wanna fuck bitches.

Speaker 1:

So here's the thing. Here's the reason you missing this part. You're usher right, hypothetically allegedly this happening. If this happened, I got a lot of money. I could just take the medicine still, make them sign an NDA and then don't tell nobody because I can't transmit it and wear condoms.

Speaker 2:

Well, you can still transmit it, though no you can't. All the medicine does is lower your chances of transmission.

Speaker 1:

No, you can't do it at all.

Speaker 2:

But I forgot you in the middle. You were in the middle, I'm not, I mean look it up. I'm not, I mean you can't.

Speaker 1:

It's, I didn't look it up because I mean we, we all at some point in time, because you know far and scared or whatnot, like I get that.

Speaker 2:

But you know it wasn't more than a scare. The bitch was like yo, like I think you gave me her as a bitch. I ain't got no goddamn herpes. That means you gave him up. That's the herpes of the shit. You know what I'm saying? Oh my gosh. So yeah.

Speaker 1:

I know, I know I hear you, but what I'm saying is the medicine is supposed to, it's a press. It yes, but remember, it doesn't really go anywhere because it stays. It stays within the bloodstream, like where the I forget what they call it, but like skin love and shit like that. It doesn't go. It doesn't go immune or anything like that.

Speaker 1:

So it lays dormant for a while At least no, it's super dormant to the point where you can't pass it. So my whole thing is he's taking that and he's using condoms. You're good to go.

Speaker 2:

I don't think he's in.

Speaker 1:

You see, you're throwing shit on them that you don't know.

Speaker 2:

I'm just saying, you know, I'm not saying that he's not using condoms.

Speaker 1:

You know how easy it is for him to hide that forever and ever and no one would know.

Speaker 2:

I'm not saying that I'm not who willingly says this, like yo.

Speaker 1:

this is what it is Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. You really don't even have to, because you're protecting yourself and you protect the other person.

Speaker 2:

I'm not saying that he's not. I'm not saying that he's not protecting himself. But you think about what Brittany Renner was saying in her book. She was like, oh yes, she had a. She wrote a whole book Talk about she gave all the niggas that she was fucking the on her come up Names and she said all the athletes and celebrities wanted to fuck with no condom to get a pregnant and the other ones. How does she put the regular niggas? She pretty much put us regular niggas that we just we were just going to get a pregnant but couldn't support the lifestyle. Pretty much everybody just wanted to fuck with no condom because she was bad.

Speaker 1:

And I'm not a reason to do that. You just want fuck her because you bad the condom shit is.

Speaker 2:

Well, she was. She said the athletes didn't want to fuck with the condom.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I've heard stories about athletes. Athletes are wild.

Speaker 2:

My athletes, don't mind, I think. I think he is out here.

Speaker 1:

I mean, that's what I think it is, but they don't realize the other shit.

Speaker 2:

Hey, look like. I told my wife. I said so, my wife went to brush today and she was like you want me to bring something back? I said, sure, yeah. So I was like all right, well, before you leave, I need to do this for you. I was like I'll try to be sexy for her, all right. And she was like what are you doing? I said I'm trying to make sure I pay for my brunch, and she's like. She's like yeah, I'm Jill Scott and you right now. I paid you on the front end. That means I got to do on the back. She's my. She just looked at me like nigga really. I say, yeah, I'm like what you? Oh God, oh, I've been wild all day today.

Speaker 1:

But all day it appears that it appears so.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you know. You know, when I went on the sex with less podcast, did that shit come out yet? No, I've been texting her about that. I'm like, oh, so what you going to do, I'll do the episode. She didn't respond. I was like, ok, I see what it is. But because they were like you know, like because? So they asked me this one particular question, it was like so when you guys were court, who's the personality? I said, well, honestly, we feed off of each other, but when it comes to stories, it's me. When it comes to, like, making sure we bring it all back together, is him? So I'll put a story out as all the way out here and he'll bring it back around and to bring back into the topic.

Speaker 1:

It seems like she said, who's talent, who's the personality.

Speaker 2:

The personality.

Speaker 1:

You listen to both. This ain't radio. You listen to both. Listen to both. Now we could treat it like radio and I could talk for fucking 45 minutes. 25 minutes, right? I hope I don't do that.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to try that. We want to try that one day. Well, I'm just talking to you and you, like you, we want to try that one day. That is an excellent project. One day, one might be the next episode I am going to. I am going to come over to topic and I'm going to just talk and I'm going to get some thoughts out and I want you to respond to these thoughts and shit. That have you? No, we're going to do that. Shout out to Alex.

Speaker 2:

We're going to do that.

Speaker 1:

Alex.

Speaker 2:

Because I was just like, yeah, you know like who. I was like, well, I mean, I have a, I have the personality, but he has the ideas. I just kind of like I told I said I just kind of run with whatever he gives me, and whatever he gives me, that's what I run with, Like. So sometimes some of the stories you'll hear is because he, he went somewhere and I was like I'm going to do this, but my story start going far left. He'd bring it back and be like so yeah, this is what you were saying, Like you know, and so it's just like OK, that makes sense. So, yeah, just kind of feed over. So I was like, yeah, we do. But she's like well, how can I have her dropped in a while? I said, well, you know, we ain't had a break.

Speaker 1:

We haven't what.

Speaker 2:

So this is back when we were on a hiatus, you were working too damn much. Yeah, I was working too.

Speaker 1:

And so I was still working a little bit too much. But that's the even and like I told.

Speaker 2:

I said, you know, at the end of the day, we and like you said, and when we first came back, we didn't have a break we didn't have that the hiatus break between one season to another. We went literally straight from one season to the other and I was like you need to break. You got to experience it. We, at this point we didn't have any shit to talk about. We'd have been sitting there like like two people on the phone with what we said. You know why? They were still attached to the ball, just sitting there. Yeah, just breathing.

Speaker 1:

You know I miss those days and I was trying to get the little girl.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you talked everything out in two days and I just sitting in like so much.

Speaker 1:

My conversation was on point. I was going to phone girl for like hours.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I used to too, for like four days, and then eventually I'm like tell me about you Every day. So I mean, I mean, I don't, you know, I do that. I'm like all right. So so what would you do right now? Oh, I'm watching the box, oh, ok. Oh, yeah, I'm watching the box too. Now I hope they play back that ass up. Yeah, me too. Oh no, they picked one, two, three. Oh, that's blink 182.

Speaker 1:

Jay used to be like that.

Speaker 2:

It did. Like I used to be that way I used to hate and love the box because I wasn't old enough to order songs on it. But I hate it. But when I saw the company's like three, four, one, I was back. That's back to that. So I used to call my sister hey, come on, they want to play back. That that's how I call my homie. Wow, that's what I'm talking about.

Speaker 1:

You know, speaking of back that ass up, I had just saw an interview with or a mash up between you, not between, a mash up interview with Manny Fresh and juvenile and juvenile recorded that song at 15. No, I'm sorry, juvenile created that song at 15, but got never got around to recording it until he got what cash money when he was like 1617. So that song been in the area for about two, was been in the area for about two, three years and he was rapping it off of I forgot what instrumentals, the different instrumental and shit, and yeah. So the whole hood knew that song and that's why the music video was that way, that's why the whole hood was there, because they knew the song. They knew the song.

Speaker 2:

That's why they didn't. They had everybody up there to. Oh, that may come, please, but you know. But you know what when cash money came out, shout out to regular booties.

Speaker 1:

That's when regular booties mattered. Yeah, that's when it was like oh, that girl got fat butt now and you'll be like, that girl got a little butt, but I thought it was fat back then. So shout out to Wallace.

Speaker 2:

So you got a little bus, so what? Yeah, that little bus so what?

Speaker 1:

So what? Poke it out, that's all the wallet.

Speaker 2:

That's all the wallet man, because I mean, you know, I did it Like for cash money, a lot of those like, by the time even be. Even when BG got on, when he dropped bling bling, he was on his eighth solo album, his eighth Eight. Ok, chopper City in the ghetto was his eighth solo album on cash money.

Speaker 1:

He didn't shout out to BG Hard of the streets. No, my heart of the streets.

Speaker 2:

It was hard Shout out to BG because BG getting out next year in like April, ok.

Speaker 1:

So what I would truly and honestly want to see when BG gets out of jail.

Speaker 2:

You still want to see him in the sun wrap?

Speaker 1:

Yes, because that's what hip boy is daddy doing.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, well, you know what, when BG gets out of jail, I think, I think we'll, we'll, we'll get a hot boys album when you know, in eight months, because look, turkish state clean, look Turkish still clean, and rap. I think I don't think nobody.

Speaker 1:

I don't think nobody fuck with Turkey and Wayne on his own time. Well look. The only person that might want to do that is BG, but I don't see it happening, look.

Speaker 2:

I put this way, wayne Wayne will make time for the hot boys Because, like, think about it in this perspective. Ok, I don't know I mean.

Speaker 1:

I mean I mean that show with a skip skip Bayless. Look like Lil Wayne might be a close look.

Speaker 2:

I put this way, lil Wayne. Lil Wayne will drop a hot boys album with them as soon as BG gets out, because B practically BG, raised the nigger. He raised no, no, yes, he did no, no. Bg raised the nigger Like, look, when you first heard, when you first heard Lil Wayne, it was on a BG album, him. Bg dropped the album that featured Lil Wayne.

Speaker 2:

They called himself the BG's, not the bubblegust, the baby gangsters, you know, say like it went when BG gets out of jail and also when BG gets out of prison, because of the difference between prison and jail, they verify that when BG gets out of prison, there will be a hot boys album or at least a hot boys song out by the 10 months later. They won't. They, they, they, they talked about. They want to make their last comeback. And since Wayne is so huge, wayne is huge, everybody loves, still loves you.

Speaker 2:

But now we all waiting for BG to get out in Turks, the one you know Turks won't get on in and in my opinion, turk was still the second best lyricist in that group. Anyway, I feel like I felt like BG was. I felt like BG came out with the most rawest lyrics. I felt like Wayne came out with the best ad libs and things that made it memorable. Turk was a second best lyricist in Juvenile, because Juvenile had dropped back that asset before we on fire came out with in that gorilla warfare. Everybody just knew Juvenile. So it's one of the things where it's like it can happen. I'm speaking into existence so that when, when, if someone catches this on social media somewhere and like, or like little Wayne or they're, like you know what we should do this, and then we're going to shout out the court in West Park and look, we'd be huge man, be huge.

Speaker 1:

Listen, I see the, I see the, I see the vision. I, I can see, I see the possibility of that happening. It probably probable, is it? Probably is no, yeah, I see the possibility. I just don't know my. I feel like he would want to be done with cash. He was already done with cash money, so why come back to do album? But everybody's, I know everybody not on cash money. I'm just saying to do that.

Speaker 2:

I think the only person still on cash money is Juvenile, and I think even now I don't cash money. That means everybody's gone, like Turk left cash.

Speaker 1:

You know I've been off of cash money for the longest.

Speaker 2:

Well, he got off of cash money after his last out when, after he dropped slow motion, he dropped Marty Gross one and two, he was done with cash money. Turk has no cash money since he got out of prison and he left cash money because he went to. He went to Kach's K O C H and he went there, and Lil Wayne is the most recent person to leave cash money because of that shit. So you, you honestly have If for business transaction for Wayne, for Wayne, for young money.

Speaker 1:

I don't think, I don't think, I don't think Wayne care. I think he bothered with it.

Speaker 2:

I think I think for, for, for, not even for Wayne's legacy, because Wayne's legacy that's why he don't care, it's solidified.

Speaker 1:

That's why he does not care, because they could, he could have been doing joint little things here and there. Whatever have you, I honestly think, because Karen's even, you know pretty much, holding down his son was, you know, just being on the record label and you know people put them on game and stuff like that, that currency or prior executive produce or not produced, but you know what I mean. Put something together for both of them, or just put something together for BG and put them on with all the the best underground producers. Yeah, that's, that's what I foresee, but I don't see, I don't see baby might extend the same, but no, I don't see BG coming back.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I don't see BG coming back, I don't see him coming back, but you know, baby, baby we'll probably be the first one to the hand, put his hand out like, all right, you know, hey, you back home, let's do this, do this music thing.

Speaker 1:

He won't do it Because he's working with you and I with a, with a couple of things like a little project, songs here and there and they actually kind of nice. You know, I just thought of you when I had the, the Juvia had a fate, had had the fate situation going back then, people of old pictures of juvenile. So would you do juvenile fate or a Boosie fate If you, if you remember the juvenile fate, would you do the juvenile fate or the Boosie fate? Look at this fate with juvenile, young Jewish.

Speaker 2:

I probably would do the Boosie fate. I like the Boosie fate, though Don't I like the juvenile fate. Was because you were not a famous like a standard thing by like that Boosie fate. That's a tough one.

Speaker 1:

Both from Louisiana. I mean yeah, both from Louisiana.

Speaker 2:

And I'll tell you, the hot boys could drop a hot album.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I'm doing the Juvia fate. Doing the Juvia fate? Yeah, because I'm looking at it now.

Speaker 2:

The hot boys could drop a hot album because they're so well known, they could get any feature they want. They can get any underground feature. They can get any mainstream feature, because you know mainstream features. They can get that from Wayne. Any underground feature, because juvenile Turk and BG were connected with a whole lot of underground people. They could get anybody on that album to make this. They can get any producer and they might even get any producer to do that to do it on on on props alone.

Speaker 1:

I don't know, the Juvia fate kind of like the Boosie fate a little bit.

Speaker 2:

You mean the Boosie fate? Look like the Juvia fate.

Speaker 1:

No, I'm looking at the day two, day two, day, two men on day, two different men. So I'm going to just say Juvia fate, boosie, fate, nah.

Speaker 2:

I'm just saying you saying that, like, like Juvia now was enough before Boosie he was.

Speaker 1:

I'm just saying, and he's over there, I'm just saying.

Speaker 2:

But the cat looking at me like nigga, you done recorded. No, nigga, I ain't done recorded, I ain't done recorded. Leo asked when I fucking copied there you go.

Speaker 1:

Leo, we just about done. So we split down the middle with the Juvia or the Boosie fate. I'm going with the Juvia fate. Now you say Juvia fate, I'm going with the Boosie. Yeah, we split down the middle. So everybody split down the middle. On that note, I think we done. They go everybody for tuning in and see you next time.

A Conversation About Cats and Music
21 Savage, Snitching Culture, COVID-19, Deer Population
Differing Perspectives on COVID Deaths
Conspiracy Theories, Comedy, Expensive Bills
Discussion on Comedians and Actors
Work and Financial Discussions
GED Test and High School Diploma
Discussion on Medication, Transmission, and Condoms
Potential Hot Boys Reunion and Collaboration