WIDM-DB In Da Mix Radio

Peach Ent presents Peach Radio Show

WIDM-DB Season 1 Episode 1

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SPEAKER_04

Peach radio show starts now. Let's go. Take a moment to tap into Peach ENT. Download the mobile app. All the information is on my website, Peach ENT dot com. Again, that's Peach ENT dot com. Check me out. Also, follow me every every single Sunday on Indemex Radio from 12 to 2. It's showtime.

SPEAKER_06

Drink up get lit. I like that. Drink up get away. One night only distance day. Drink up get away. Let's have a party for the weekend. One time only distance day. Let's have a party for the weekend. That's the double stamp. That's the best to join off. That's the book off. That's the watch the owner. I got the vibe. Play space if you want to. Turn the music up louder. It's all you. Two steppin' and Millie rockin' the y'all swaggin. Look what happened. I got them dancing, the y'all laughing. They y'all showing love, no hate, though. All day. You know my name, though. Cups in the air while you pour it up.

SPEAKER_04

Hey, what is up? Happy Sunday. I know it's been a minute. I know it seems like I've been missing, but I am back. Welcome to the Peach Radio show, streaming on In the Mix Radio. Always, shout out to Patrick for the opportunity. Please like, follow, and share in the mix radio on all platforms. Please take that time, take that minute. You got it. If you enjoy me and everything else that be flowing on this station, yo, it's dope. So please, sweet, sweet, check in with all of us. As usual, I need you to pull out your mobile phones, right? Go to your app store and download the Peach ENT mobile app. Also, follow, like, and share at Peach E T brands across all social media platforms because you know you love me. You know I am the ish. Now, tonight, listen, this is a very, very special show. I have a very special guest. Um guest, say hello and introduce yourself.

SPEAKER_03

What's up, everybody? It's smack eye. I'm here on the Peach Radio show. Excited. Oh my gosh. First, everyone knows who I am. Smack the Indy Plug as well. Deal with a lot of independent artists. Didn't know that you were gonna play Nilly All Day. Big shout out to Nilly All Day with Get Lit.

SPEAKER_04

I think that's a song that needs to be worldwide so that people leave that drama at home when they go to get lit and have a good time. Yo, just vibe out. Oh, what's up, P? No, and I'm just I'm happy to be here, you know. You know, I've been sick for a minute, so it just feels good to get behind my mic. And I know my my followers, my listeners are tired of listening to previous episodes of me talking about it. So I'm happy to be here. And you know what? Listen, bringing in the show with Millie, that that's that damn get lit is a whole lot pantling out here. Yes, it is. That definitely could get a party started. Speaking of parties, right? Before we actually get into our topic for tonight, we're gonna do a little bit of things that's different, right? We first we're gonna play the news, and then we're gonna chat it up, and then we're gonna go into our topic. But first, let's play some more anthems, right? So let's get into it. My next song, y'all let me know if y'all like it. I want y'all to drop in the comment section. You know, I do put the visuals on my YouTube and let me know if you feeling geo from the block. All right, so let's get into this music, and then when we come out on the other side, we'll start the discussion for tonight. All right, y'all stay tuned. Let's get it.

SPEAKER_18

That's my ish.

SPEAKER_12

Come get your nigga, he all of my block. Bitch, I'll say it again. Come get your nigga, he all on my block. He choppy got you feelin' cocky. You move a couple and nobody gon' stop me. Come get your magazine all of my body, can't fuck with no hoe. In public, put it on the show and I go ooh. Someone put me to the next list. I be chillin' in my crew and they get poppin' when we drop. Getting plastic with the smoochies in the baddies, in the car. We in the spot with all the scammers in the shooters. Start a storm with my money making crew. With my niggas with the rubber band stack. I see a couple baddies bringing some bottles from the back. And it's like that. Niggas really tryna be like me. I still poppy looking heavy. I got diamonds on my feet. You can't even dance. Nigga struggling to find a beat. Who told you I want your nigga? No, I don't do charities. Hooper me, bitch. Who told a DJ to fuck up the beat? My nigga go turn that shit up. Ask me the hook and turn up the beat. Can't drive, cause nigga, I'm tweaking. They make the money to that while I'm sleepin'. Niggas be hiding, I do what I'm seeking. Don't follow me when I'm out when I'm creepin', sneakin'. Leave a nigga home when you're cheating. Hop out with my mink, make me. Let's go, Bobby. Got my bitches out in pink. Hop out with all the receipts before we link. Send this shower pig. Let me know it don't stink. Keep putting up. Oh, write it, write it. Don't come if you're thinking about it. Oh, write it, write it. I love when it's still in the closet. Oh, write it, don't stop it. If it was right, then you gon' get replaced. Get the fuck out my face. We in the spot with all the scammers and the shooters. Start a storm with my money making crew. With my niggas with the rubber band stack. I see a couple baddies bringing some more bottles from the back. And it's like damn. Niggas really tryna be like me. I start poppy walking heavy. I got diamonds on my feet. You can't even dance. Niggas struggling to find a beat. Who told you I want your nigga? No, I don't do charity. Scoop on me, bitch.

SPEAKER_02

As we get, the energies high, lift the music be a guy. Off one, one, we shall rise. We don't fall. As we get, the energy's high. Let them be a guy. Off the one. One for all. We shall rise. We don't fall. We will you realize? You are the real wild. We will you realize? You are the real wild. I call you. I call you to move. I call you to breathe life into your heart. Breathe life into your body. You are a blessing. You are a movement. You are a beast. I'm not a tool. You are a time traveler. You are floating to the universe with power and break. Your face, your body, it's moving. The everlasting movement of life. Feel good, look good, you are good. You deserve the beauty and the rest. You are here, you are now. We don't fall. It's be all died. Off the one. We'll die. We don't fall. I don't know. Let's do that. We still write. We don't fall. Let's do this we all die. Off all one. One we don't eye. We don't fall. We don't fall. We don't fall. We know right. We don't fall.

unknown

We know right.

SPEAKER_04

To make it relatable and the chain going is to give you inspiration. Get inspired. Tune in to Hop the Series Wednesdays at 8 p.m. Oh man, we are back. Listen. Alright, so I got the plug here of indie music. Now you just heard Gio from the block, Who But Me, and then Carla G, we rise. Now you tell me, you let me know. I played two songs purposely so I can get a smacky indie plug critique. What did you think about those two videos? Well, I like the first one. Um Geo from the block. I like that. I like the beat and I like how he flowed with it and you know he took it there. Um I love his uh wordplay, his delivery. Usually for me, if I can't get into it in the first 30 seconds, he got cut it off. But the beat had me moving my shoulders, had me getting it, I just like it. And then to have an artist that can deliver in the way that he did with his wordplay, you know what I mean? It was just great. It's a hit. Uh it should be on, you know, national radio for real.

SPEAKER_07

Wow.

SPEAKER_04

Hopefully he got some money to put behind that track and really push it the way it needs to be pushed. Because that that is a dope hit and it's talking to people, it's something people can relate to. So here's a fun fact, right? Do you realize that that's a two-year-old video? Are you serious? That song is two years old. Now I'm sorry. Listen, y'all, the visuals to catch the visuals of these videos, you have to go to Peach ENT brands on YouTube. But yes, or you can catch it in the app, too. Yeah, catch it in the app. But listen, that's two years, so for it to be two years old, it sounds fresh and current. Right, it sounds fresh and current and relatable. I mean, that's how most music, I mean, if it's beat maker is from New York, and it sounds like he's from New York. Is he from New York? He's from New York. Okay, New York really got some dope, some dope beats, dope artists coming out of New York. I mean, I just gotta put it there. I mean, hey, that's where hip hop started. You know what I'm saying? But um, yeah, that was dope. And for you to tell me that's two years old, yeah. I definitely need to be connected. I would love to hear more from what he got. He could be, you know how um uh what's her name? Um she's from Virginia. She went out to Virginia, Missy Elliott. You see how Missy Elliott's music was before his time? That beat sounded for his time. Right. Yeah. She was doing her thing. She definitely was. Now, that second song, which is by uh Carla G. I'm a fan of Carla G. I like a lot of her music. I really like this one. This is like really I like it. And I'm gonna tell you why I like it. Um, it's it reminds me of back in the day when I used to go to the tea parties uh for the uh Wait a minute, wait a minute. You have to explain to our listeners what a tea party is. Okay, well, a tea party is a party for lesbian women during pride, and sometimes they would have it outside of pride, but most of the time that I've ever gone to a tea party, it's been during pride for LGBTQ. And uh it's just all lesbian women, and it just reminds me of people it's a song that makes you feel free and it's the beat, you know what I mean?

SPEAKER_03

And if you're a DJ, you could speed up those beats per minute and turn it into an even faster song. Right. Because I was sitting here when I was listening to it, I was like, yo, even if we split this song up, people are still gonna have a great time.

SPEAKER_04

People are gonna be dancing, people are gonna be feeling it. But it took me back to my younger years of going to tea parties and how the music worked. Yeah, it actually uh for me, I I had like a free, free flowy, free spirit-loving vibe. Yeah, but also I'm not gonna front, Carla. You know, I love you, girl. I love all your songs. Um, but this one, when I first heard it, I was thinking about wait a minute, is she trying to get me off a slave ship? This is what it feels like. Like I just landed in America. Yeah, remind me like, you know, like I can see how you can feel that way. But that still empowered. Yes, makes it unforgettable. It made me feel like uh, you know, I can't remember the movie at the name of the movie, but the woman with the natural hair walking with the spear down the sand, and it was a whole bunch of women going to The Woman King. Yes, the woman. Like that could have been a theme song for them as they're walking down the rise. Yeah. Oh yeah, okay. But it still it still gives you that empowering, um that empowering feel though. Right. And I'm just saying that for me as a woman, you know, that's what it made me feel like. It made me feel free, it made me feel good. It made me, and just the words in which she was saying, you know what I'm saying? Okay. You know, music is is a feel-good thing. Right. And I can say I felt good. The beat was just right. It took me back to a younger time when I felt free, when I felt appreciated, when I felt like I was, you know, the ish. I mean, I'm in the ish now, but you know, it was empowering and uplifting. Yes. See, listen, music is supposed to have a lasting impact, and I definitely felt both of them, two different vibes, but I appreciate both of them. So, since I got you here, right? Let me ask you this. I saw something. You were talking about the elements of hip hop, like judging people. Yeah. Do you know them off the top of your head? If you don't, it's fine. I was just curious because you know, we have some people that might just want to be music artists. Now, if you don't have them, then maybe you can just tell them where to follow you if they are looking to get the elements. Okay, so there are five um foundational pillars of hip hop. Djang. Okay. These are the five elements. Okay, breakdancing, graffiti, and then the knowledge of self. Oh yeah, so those are the five elements of hip hop.

SPEAKER_11

Okay. Well, guess what?

SPEAKER_04

You know, uh, we'll we'll get to it at the end of the show, but we uh for the magazine that I write for, we also do the five elements, review people's music to see if it meets our five elements. Okay. And a lot of it has to do with what I just said. I think we need to update them elements because breakdancing, who in the hell is breakdancing in 2027? Yeah, people are still breakdancing, to be honest. Really? It's still going on. Yeah. Well, I can't. I've been a break dancing, my dad gonna leave. Yeah. It has. You know, break dancing, I mean, that's the physical movement of you know, dance of the music. Yeah, I get it. I mean, even though people we don't see too much of it during this time, but when people have a dance off, you see people going into that breakdancing still, especially if we play an old school hip hop song.

SPEAKER_03

You know what I mean?

SPEAKER_04

Your uncle, your granddaddy, somebody gonna start breakdancing to the music because that's what was in during their time. You can play an old school joint. So, how good are you at breakdancing? Uh, I'm I mean, I was pretty good back in the day. I used to do the worm really good, but you know, I'm older now, so I can't do all that. I wish I could, but I can't do it now. But you still have it going on in dance crews. All right. You know what I'm saying? Okay. So listen, everyone, if you are watching the visuals, I'm about to put uh my email. If you're interested in getting your music played on the Peach Radio show, please email me your videos. If you don't have videos, send me some cover art and your MP, what is it, MP4s? MP3s. I'm sorry, MP3s, but I prefer MP4s to music at peachent.com. That's music at peachent.com. If you can't catch it, go watch the visuals again. It's on my YouTube channel at Peach ENT Brands. Okay, just check me out. Trust me, you will love it, you will be impressed, and also share this awesome show because I am having a great time and I can't wait to get into our topic. But before that, right, since I got the plug here, I'm gonna play some more music. And when we come out on the other side, I want you to tell me what you think about these artists. I mean, because I love them, but you may not. Listen, listeners, I need y'all to continue to tune in. We got a couple music videos for you to listen to, and then we're gonna start jumping into the news and then our topic, which is you know, black man, I'm scared, right? So just hang on in there so we can have this discussion. You ain't going nowhere, are you, plug? Nah, I ain't going nowhere. We're gonna talk about this. Black man, I'm scared. All right, y'all. See y'all on the other side. Don't go nowhere and share, share, share. Cause you know you love this.

SPEAKER_19

What you waiting for? Tune in to my QA interview series. Questions by Maybach Mel. You never know who my special guest may be. So subscribe to my channel at Maybach Mel eighteen oh four.

SPEAKER_18

That's my ish.

SPEAKER_00

I've been up to it. I'm at the help of the neck three. I'm the one that put it. I've only got to make it not be hard. I've only got a bit of a bit of a bit. I've put me off. Everybody is being ball. On the hot bro, stay half of my low broadcast. It's staying the high bros coming out. Looking like they get summoned out. I'm putting a 10 and I'm both for 27 niggas on the minnow hoes. I do have it now hold. I'm gonna turn it out, hold. Yeah, that's easy to leave. It's gonna bummy fleet, it's gonna almost with teeth, he will be getting to deep. I'ma need a new chain, okay? I'm gonna find a new race, okay?

SPEAKER_18

I'ma be puppy the boy.

SPEAKER_00

I'ma be puppy the pick okay. I put the city and never sweet. I'm at the hat in the next week. I'm a two big in the neck hood. I'm gonna be bitches, niggas and bitches be filling me, sit in the beat, sit in me, I've put me up, I put the city and next, I'm a hat from the next week, put the foot nigga, I put it off, I'm gonna shoot, I don't win it the whole other hammer.

SPEAKER_01

Any question we say is a two star Niggas though I'm a move when it question I wanna die. Niggas baby, lazy, lazy, niggas over too much to talk about. Give a fuck if she's having the baby, that's a fit of course to make it a bunch of I'm here. We gon' be clear. That'll stop the air, I got the food in here, I got the gold in here, 44 stops. I got the black in here, I force we got the black in the air.

SPEAKER_00

I'm from the city that never sleep. I must that happen in every street, pull up on niggas that fit it deep, I'm from New York, I'm a two bit in the never hood, pull up with niggas in every hood, that happens in every hood, I'm from New York, shit in me, all of these bitches are feeling me, niggas and bitches be grilling me, shit in me, kidding me, I'm from New York, I'm from the city that never sleep, I must that happen in every street, pull up on niggas that fit it deep.

SPEAKER_14

Me without these rags is like a bitch without that weed. Every damn on that paper taste like poppin' on a dream. I didn't dream my women broke and started tapping in my dream. I'ma dig it to the money, I'ma fuckin' money fan. I got a bad bitch bad. If I see it, I'ma break. I'ma trap it, bring in a trap, break it do mad. What's the blank on the thing? Spin the block white, what's my man's when I'm bit snappin' light damn on it, bitch, face like standin' on the corner. Stand a day I'm on it. I got five bitch to them I brought the words of on a brown, stay some bit of spectrum, within the spectrum face, big lord, spit the face today, no bits of no more. I can't fuck with the low bitch of that like naked man. Give me my last and I'm talking about nigga, biggest freak. I'm tryna beat I'm doing this down this day. I can't find a win. We bought some light and movin' out trapping out my granny, spot that's not the trap across the street. Nigga spot on with that one, I got more mouths in the meat. I got stuck, I got funny, I got buttons to lose, but ain't niggas drippin' that you stay on computers. I be in the pack out, still these views and delight. I just got a full damn road and put the back in the fucking Me without these racks, like a bitch without that weed. Every damn on that paper taste like pop on a dream. Broken started trappin' in my dream. I'ma dig it to the money, I'ma fuckin' money fake. I got bad bitch badges. If I see it, I'ma grab it. I'ma trap, bring in the trap, baby. Timmy do magic. Musty blame who did, gotta spin the block twice. Watch my mirrors when I'm bitpin, and I stopping at the lights.

SPEAKER_17

What is up, family? What the hell is going on?

SPEAKER_15

Racially profiled. They followed him around. He was shopping. He took four waters, he put them back, he even showed them by shaking his hoodie that he took nothing. And he walked out of the store. He didn't argue with them, he didn't have any confrontation, he didn't curse them, he just walked out. He was respectful. And yet, two grown chased him. He fell and they shot him. He shot him dead, like as if he was a dog. And I do not understand how that jury can come back and say at the that he was not guilty. He was in a runner stance. It was shown by the pathologist, and it they said he was not guilty. It was devastating for me to get a call from Alviness Glenn letting me know that Rick Chow was released. That broke me more than you can ever imagine because my murderer of my son was set free. And it's not fair and it's unjust. And nobody can tell me that this is not racially motivated. Because I'm not supposed to be on social media anyway. But when I go and I look at my social media, I have racist people coming to my page, going under my son's pictures, leaving the most horrific things, saying that they're glad he's dead, good riddance, and I am tired. I don't want this to happen to any other child. No black or brown child, should have to go through this. No parent should have to go through this. This has to stop today. And I just learned today that South Carolina, if you're if it's a murder charge, that they cannot bring in any of your prior acts. Rick Chow shot two people before. Rick Chow accosted a child in that store and beat her up with a gun on her hip. And none of that information could be brought to light. And I do not think that is fair. And if that is on the law books, that needs to be changed. Because if that was not there, then my son would have gotten justice. And to allow this person to terrorize this neighborhood for 12, 13 years is ridiculous. And it's just showing that it's okay to treat black and brown people wrong, and it's not. My son loved everybody. He would tell me, like, oh mom, you're being judgmental. You shouldn't do that. That's against God. And the devil shot him dead, and he laid right there. And we got no justice from South Carolina. And I think it is disgusting. And I cannot even, I don't even know why. I have no words. But every day I will not be able to speak to my son, hear his voice change, see him grow, go to prom. He will never get married. I would never hold his grandchild my grandchildren. Nothing. But Chow is able to go home with his lion son, Andy Chow, and they're able to have dinner with the wife Alice, who all three of them came out that store and they chased my baby. And I think the entire family should be held accountable because it was racially profiled. And I do not think that it is right, and they all should be punished. And if the I'm I don't know what laws that we need to create to help our people, but it needs to be done. And it needs to be done now. Cyrus should not be gone. None of our children should be gone from the acts of racism, from profiling, from any of that. He should be here. And until the world treats us like we are human beings, I mean, come on. Y'all hire us. Y'all want us around. You like our culture. You want to listen to the music, you want to wear our clothes, you want to do all of that stuff. But when it comes to protecting us, and when it comes to looking at our children, you look at us as if we are animals and we are not. I am a college-educated woman. I hold a master's degree in information technology management. My son was not a thug. He was a 14-year-old boy who was trying to find his way. And for any person that acts like when they were 14, 15, 16, 17, that they did not do nothing wrong, that they did not smoke and drink and do and have sex and do whatever that they were not supposed to do by their parents, it is a lie. And it is judgmental, and I refuse to allow any of you to sit up there and make it seem like we were bad parents because we were not. All of our children make mistakes, but I don't see anybody holding, saying, Oh, well, you know what? My kid did X, Y, and Z, my kid did X, Y, and Z. No, they're coming onto my page and try to demonize my child, and I will not have it. And it stops today. Keep your opinions to yourself. And until you are in my shoes and you have to bury a child, I don't want to hear nothing from you.

SPEAKER_04

Wow. Wow. We are back. That was um Cyrus Carmack Belton's mom. Um that was powerful. That was very powerful. That's the first time I viewed that. You know, I've heard and and viewed um other things, but to hear the mother's response after the verdict, that is very, very touching. If it doesn't start standing up, to start advocating, to start wanting change. I feel like she made a call to people who like her, who are in her situation, allies who can see that it was wrong.

SPEAKER_03

I feel like she did an open call to action for change in South Carolina. You know what I'm saying? I couldn't believe the verdict either. But to find out from this interview that this man, the store owner, has done this before. And he can you can't bring it up. I mean, they when they pull black, when they pull profile and pull us over, anybody over, to be honest, they can see your whole record. And you're judged upon that. I can only speak in the state that I live in, and I know other states around me, they do the same thing. You know what I'm saying? But none of what he did in the past could come into this case. Something is is is very racially profiled.

SPEAKER_04

How do you feel legal? Our legal system is something, but just you know, for people who are listening and you have no idea who um Cyrus Carmack Belton is or uh Rick Chow, um, let me give you a little bit of background information. On June 1st, a jury found Rick Chow, uh, a former Columbia. This happened in South Carolina. I'm from South Carolina, my family, so I know how race racist they can be out there. So either way, Rick Chow, a gas station owner, was found not guilty on June 1st in the shooting death of 14-year-old Cyrus Carmack Belton in in May 2023. So this happened three years ago. And I didn't hear about it then when it happened. You know, I'm usually on the news, but I think we're hearing so much about it now. Well, because of the verdict. Right. So let me give more information. So prosecutors argue that Carmack Belton, well, Cyrus, was fatally shot in the back after being falsely accused of stealing, and this is crazy, water, a water bottle from Chow's uh former store on Parkland Road on May 2023. Um evidence has shown that actually Chow chased this boy. First, first off, if you haven't seen the video, please go on to YouTube. At this point, it's just streaming everyone everywhere. I'm sorry. Everyone is getting clicks and views and likes off of this case from all different racial backgrounds. I am appalled at this. I'm gonna give my perspective a little later. But what kind of bothered me after watching the video is I thought, and you are an advocate, Vonda, so you can let me know. I thought that there was a rule where if someone stole out of a store and they made it out of it, the store, are you supposed to, as a store owner, chase that person? And Rick Child chased him over a hundred yards away from the store. Yeah. Well, you when when it's you know, when you got your bigger stores, you know, your chain stores.

SPEAKER_03

If you see somebody stealing, you call the police, but you're not as an employee, you're not supposed to give chase. Not even a manager. Okay. You know what I'm saying? You're not supposed to give chase. Come on, think about it. Everybody has got insurance. A bottle of water is what, a dollar and twenty five, dollar fifty? We'll go to two. I don't know if it was name brand. And if it was name brand, it's two dollars and thirty-nine cents. So my thing is, is do we really was it worth chasing him off of something that you could have just called the police, you got video footage, and you can say this is what he looked like. You know what I'm saying? But and like you said, in most stores, no, you're not supposed to be going after nobody. I used to be a store manager, and that was one of our rules. You could actually lose your job. Yeah. Following somebody who's stealing out.

SPEAKER_04

Stores got insurance. You can write it off. Right. But look, I mean, I would be a little um concerned about even trying to write off a dollar bottle of water because that would make your insurance go up, right? Why writing off a dollar bottle of water? To me, some things, you know, you just want to, I would just let that go. Because this is a 14-year-old boy. Obviously, you can't, you know, you don't know exactly what someone's age is, but you could kind of do, you know, approximate. And you could tell this is a teenage boy. In my mind, if someone's coming inside of a store and they're stealing water, maybe there may be a circumstance going on within their home. And me being a store owner, I might just let you walk away with that dollar bottle of water. It's only you probably wholesale spent 25 cents on it. Like I know Sam's Club. What do you get? For six dollars, you get 28 bottles. 40 bottles of water. Yes, 40 bottles. Thank you for the correction. 40 bottles of water. So we break that down. That bottle of water is not even worth a dollar. It's not. And then what's crazy about the whole situation? When you looked at the video, you seen the boy put the video, the water back.

SPEAKER_03

You see him take it and you see the water go back. But y'all were already casing him in the joint, so you should have seen that. And if the person who was watching the video, they should have seen him putting the water back. Y'all made him feel uncomfortable. We don't know what was in that young man's mind because he's not here to tell us.

SPEAKER_04

He's not here to tell us.

SPEAKER_03

But I know me as a if I feel uncomfortable and you follow me around, I don't want to spend no money in your store.

SPEAKER_04

Right.

SPEAKER_03

You follow me around like you're you're calling me a thief. And I've been in situations like that. I will walk out because you're not getting my black dollar.

SPEAKER_04

Right. Making me feel uncomfortable. You know what that makes reminds me of that movie. Was it drinking the juice in the hood where the Chinese people's like nigger still? Like they jumping out of the freezer, nigger still, and they jumping from a hideous nigga still. Not to make light of this because it's it's very serious, very serious, but that little that little C just kind of reminds me, you know, puts me back into a space when I lived in the hood, and how I felt going inside of these Korean or Chinese stores. Like they really, really watch you. Another thing, right? It's alleged that Cyrus had a gun within his hoodie. Yes. And Chow alleges in his defense, he alleged that he actually pulled his gun and he was afraid that he was gonna shoot his son. Yes.

SPEAKER_03

It shows the it shows the video from the time he walked in, placed his book bag at the door. So when did he show the gun?

SPEAKER_04

Well, nobody. Now listen, you gotta go on this video. Everybody listening. Go on to these YouTube streets, listen to these news broadcasts. There's so many stories that he was running. He had the gun inside his hoodie, and I guess it must have come out. Some some people say that it came out of the hoodie as he was running, and Child thought that he was gonna pick it up and shoot his son, so he shot him in the back. Or they're saying that he saw the um handle of the gun. Now, how do you see the handle of a gun when you're running behind somebody? I don't know, or maybe he alleged he saw it in the store. I doubt that because I'm not chasing somebody with a gun outside the store. Exactly. Now, I did look at some of the trial, and one thing that just destroyed me because I'm a nurse as my profession, my day profession. He shot the boy in the pericardium, like the sack around his heart. So to shoot somebody there, that's a slow death. Slow, like you suffocating in your blood and your chest because your blood is not pumping. Right. And so that baby shot laying on the ground, and you got all your aggressors standing around you. That is a way to die. In those seconds. I can only imagine what was going through his mind. And he probably was thinking about, I just want my mom. I'm 14 years old. Well, he probably was just thinking, why did I just go in there? You know, I this is not how I thought my day was gonna end. You know, 14 years old. Yeah, that's pretty sad. Um that's very sad, and that's very deep when you explain. Very sad. So it was a slow death, slow death, and what makes it worse, the nail that hit the coffin for me is his defense attorney, Sean Kent, a black man, right? He his closing arguments at the end was weak. No, it was eloquent, and it won over the jury. It was eloquent if you just heard it, and again, if you like what I'm saying here. Um, I have another page.

SPEAKER_03

It went over the jury if he was found not guilty.

SPEAKER_04

Listen, he was found not guilty, he was child's lawyer. Sean Kent, he did an excellent job. Black lawyer, excellent job. Excellent job. If you want to hear it, go. You can go on my YouTube channel. I have another one, I have several at Peach CEO, and go listen to it. It was so eloquent that black man spoke very well. That was listen, that closing argument today. Oh, he oh, well, I'll tell you, don't wonder. I'll tell you, this wasn't Cyrus's lawyer, no, Rick Child's lawyer. Yeah, he had an eloquent closing argument. Let me tell you, if you read some of the comments under this video, they're like, You should put this in the law books, how great he did. And then he turned around because you know, the black community was upset, yeah, and he made a whole video basically stating I'm gonna just break I'm gonna put it in my words. I don't care, I don't give a shit. I'm working, this is my job, right? And that's you know, plain and simple. Exactly. But I have my thoughts about that, and I'll save it for the end. But yes, this case, listen, listeners, if you haven't heard about it, you could just type Rick Chow in any search engine, it'll pop up. You would get a chance to watch the video, you'll see Cyberx in the store, you'll read the case, and you you know, make your own judgment and leave it below this video and let me know how you feel. I know how I personally, you know, feel. Actually, I can say that because the topic is, you know, black man, I'm scared. And you know, we'll get into deeper as to why I feel that way. But with this case in particular, I just personally, you know, when I see a child, I any child, white child, hispanic child, Chinese child, whatever child, whatever nationality you are, I don't think it's ever it's nothing that a child could do really outside trying to murder me where I'm trying to shoot and kill you. Yeah, it's nothing that you could steal. Yeah, because nine times out of ten, I probably just replace it, just you know, give it to you. Like you said, insurance is here. And if you wanted to shoot him, why not shoot him in the leg if you wanted to slow him down? Exactly. That's just such a very shots in her mask, very personal to me. Right, you know, I agree with you on that. Um also in the world that we live in, the the hateful comments that that the mother received, and oh, he should have been dead, and and I can just imagine um what type of messages she was getting under her son's picture on social media. And that's just the world we live in. It's I feel like, and I'm gonna be very transparent, with the way things are going on the federal side of things, I feel like we're going backwards. And we're experiencing what our ancestors felt back in the day.

SPEAKER_11

Yeah.

SPEAKER_04

That's what I feel.

SPEAKER_11

We are going backwards.

SPEAKER_04

We're seeing more racially profile pullover by the cops and how they're treating black men, black women, even responding to incidents, the way that they're treating uh our people is different than if it was their people. And that's why I say our justice system has truly it's not equal. It's not equal. It's not fair and equitable. Right, it's not fair and equitable, and it's not equal to all people. But how could it be when it was designed during a time where you know everything was about whiteness? It was about and that's why people gotta stand up more and advocate for change. You want change. I mean, as I was reading through uh some of the things, I saw where uh you know someone had had shot, you know. Uh um how can I explain it? I saw somewhere where someone had shot someone and it was the other way around, right? They were found guilty.

SPEAKER_03

Black store owner shot somebody, they found guilty. You feel what I'm saying? Might not have been the same age, but they stole out of the store.

SPEAKER_04

But if it was the other way around, that's all I'm trying to say is that we as people of color, we would have got time. I I can go with that. I just don't have a case to support that. But yeah, I can I can I can see that, I can see that happening. But um, yeah, if you are listening, just take a moment and you know, think about how this case made you feel. I feel for that mother, yeah. I do, I feel for the family, and you tell me, you know, in the comments, just let me know how you feel, you know, under the video at Peach ENT brands on YouTube. How let me know how you felt. Let me know do you think this young 14-year-old boy deserved to die? He didn't deserve that. Should there have been some other form of punishment? Should Rick Chow in the moment done something different? Let me know what your thoughts are. For me personally, I think Rick Chow just feels a way about African American people or foundational whatever you call yourself, you know, melanated. I think he has an issue, and we as a people, you know, with the boycott that they got going on right now with the his the Chinese stores, yeah. We need to follow suit. Okay, yeah, but how long will that last?

SPEAKER_03

I don't know because we as a uh we as people we don't stay unified. We don't, we don't. We we stood unified on the target thing, but there were still people going in target, you know. I mean, I don't use those services from that community, but we as a people need to stay unified. If you truly feel that justice was not served, then you need to follow through with the boycott.

SPEAKER_04

Oh, come on, come on, smack. Uh now, this is what you're asking the black community to to do, which I can do it, right? Hey, they can say they heard it from Smack the Indy Plug and follow through with the boycott. Listen, follow through. You're asking them not to get their nails done, you're asking them not to go to the beauty supply store. I mean go to an all-black beauty supply store. You're asking them not to get their shrimp fried rice, you're asking them not to do a lot of black people who big shrimp-fried rice.

SPEAKER_03

I'm keeping it real. Learn how to make your own.

SPEAKER_04

Yeah, that's true. You know what I mean? Spend black. That's true. But we put money back into our I totally agree, but we have a hard time supporting what we actually have right now. Exactly. So during the boycott, that just sounds like we're gonna get white folks or other nationalities is gonna get that black dollar because I don't think the black people are going to circulate the dollar amongst ourselves. So we'll boycott the Chinese people, but it's just other nationalities that'll get rich. I don't know. Listen, y'all let us know in the comments what y'all think, and I will personally re jot them down and I will bring it back to the next Peach Radio show. So now off to the next conversation, the next news video that we have. Now, this is a Carmelo Anthony news video clip, and it got your boy Charleston White in it. Yo, listen, all right, let me play this and then you know what, Smack? You let me know what you think. All right.

SPEAKER_13

Breaking mother, breaking news, breaking motherfucking news. I'm sorry to have to nap. I'm sorry to have to know. I am stepping away from the Carmolo athletic family. I am removing myself. I am no longer involved with the family. And here's why. I'm not getting in bed with Black Lives Matter. I'm not getting in bed with DJ McCoy. I'm not getting in bed with Dominic Gotta Gotta. And I'm not playing for money to pay people beat. This money is going to the boys of people. The rest of the money goes back to the donor. The rest of the money goes back to the donor. I was starting to feel like I was being you. For my influence and my connections and reports. When I tell you we raised over one million dollars one day, probably. They wanted to start another GoFundMe. I said no, I'm not doing the GoFundMe. They wanted to know after we pay for the bill. When the money go down. No. The extra money don't go back to you. It goes back to the people who gave it. It don't go to nothing else. The money is for the bill. So going forward, I am no longer talking with, nor associated, or helping Carmelo Anthony. His daddy in the way. I don't I I don't like weak. I hate weak men. I'd rather stand with a stone daddy like that Mathcap man than his black weak father trying to play victim. Uh oh, nigga, your son still living. Hug him, send him some books to read. I got the money, let's start to work on the pill. Anything else don't make sense, nigga. Fucking wrong with you. So myself, along with criminal defense mitigation specialist, uh Stanley Bridge, Tan Rose, along with attorney Mitch Note. Along with Attorney Mitch Note, we are removing ourselves. Mitch Mitchell never won the case. But Mitch said he's not taking the case. Mitch said he's not taking the case. Why? Too many hands involved. They're trying to bring too many black lawyers involved. We don't need blackness. We need righteousness. We need righteousness. We don't need blackness. Oh, the daddy rubbed me the wrong way. Nigga. When I got an email from Mitchell. I need this email. Email the floor to me. What if Mitch ain't me in it, Mitch Money, it mixed on taking it. It's gonna stick it like this. I'm telling the nigga say I'm gonna make everybody believe you playing for the money, nigga. You wanna get the money. Disassociate yourself from me. You wanna get this money? We sit in the back. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So uh I'm not in it for the money. Long before this internet thing, I've been working with children.

SPEAKER_04

Wow. Wow. Ladies and gentlemen, that was Charleston's crazy ass white. Well, oh my goodness. All right. He said a lot though.

SPEAKER_03

Even though, you know, I know Charleston is creating chaos online, a comedian. There's a lot of truth in there and what he's saying, though. And I can understand when he said this is not blackness, meaning you can't have, especially where this took place at in the state that it was in, you can't have a whole bunch of. I mean, we may think it looks powerful, but you also gotta have some whiteness to it, too. And when I say whiteness, I mean lawyers that are known. You feel what I'm saying? It's also, I don't know, that's just my my thought. Sometimes we can have too much of us on something and they don't take us seriously. You gotta look at where you're at with it in Texas, right?

SPEAKER_04

Isn't this where this took place? Yes. We all know about Texas and how certain parts of it. You even had uh Dr.

SPEAKER_03

Matthews, the female activist, come out and spread some things about it, you know what I mean, to enlighten us. But I can't, I'm gonna honestly say that I can't blame Charleston White. It's about the boy, not about paying bills for y'all, not about paying mortgages, not about putting money in your pocket. It's for the appeal for your son. That's what it's for, nothing else. Right. You already did a GoFundMe, got a whole bunch of money. Y'all had to move, buy a whole new house.

SPEAKER_04

Oh my goodness. I'm just keeping it real.

SPEAKER_03

Like, it's about the appeal. And for him to raise a million within 24 hours, that is about who Charleston White is. It is about his connections. And it was done with under the under the surface.

SPEAKER_04

Yeah, what is Charleston? Like a um low-level, low-level celebrity?

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, and he's like he's an influencer. Okay. Because he was asking for 75k.

SPEAKER_04

75k to a million dollars. Listen, I can't even raise 75k. I don't even know if I could raise 200. Yeah, but let me just get people up to date. If this is your first time listening to Charleston White go on a rant, he's actually talking about the Carmelo Anthony case. Um, let me give you some background information. So Carmelo Anthony 19 was sentenced to 35 years in, I can't believe it, 35 years in prison on June 9, 2026. Now you see how everything is happening, like the first few days of June is just uh is a lot. Um for the April 2025 fatal stabbing of 17-year-old Austin Metcalf at a Frisco, Texas track meet. A jury rejected his uh claim for self-defense. Um now, just some background information off these YouTube streets and yes, off of uh, you know, the news, the mainstream news, the mainstream media. Um, a lot of people have stopped getting their news actually from the regular news, and they like to, you know, hunt around on social media. But anyway, so some of the facts on the ground for this case. It was an all-white jury. Carmelo Anthony, all white but six, but no black people, but there were no black people of color. Okay, well, let's put it on. No black people, people of color. There was no people to match who he is, right? It was no jury of his elect of peers. Um, so it was okay, you're right. All white jury, even though these people got white faces, they are people of color. Okay, Carmelo Anthony had a white lawyer. Carmelo Anthony didn't testify and they didn't show the video of what happened. Yeah, that's now I find that so suspicious. Oh, yeah. That right there. But in the Cyrus case, you see the video just boom, boom, all over the place, right? Right. But I have been searching the internet and I cannot find the video the Carmelo Anthony video. I just hear, like, I have some clips um that I will put up on my social media pages on my um YouTube pages. I have several at Peach ENT brands and at Peach CEO, right? I do have testimonies from people that actually saw the video. And I heard that some of them the witnesses switched up their stories. Well, yeah, the from what they originally gave the high school witnesses did change up their story from the initial. Um if you can actually get to my YouTube channel, I'll have it posted there by Monday. The the witnesses that saw that video says, and this is drum roll, drum roll, right? Please don't hold it to me because I am halfway a hundred and my memory isn't all that great, but I believe they said that it was four people. Some people said four, some people say it was six people that surrounded that boy. So there wasn't just the twins, it wasn't Austin and his twin, and he just stabbed them. That's how the story the the way the media is painting it is you know, as if these two twins, they were six foot big, bulky. He's only five eight. They approached him, he got hostile. Don't come up to me. You step to me, I'm a you know, and then he stabbed him. No, he was surrounded, they jumped him.

SPEAKER_09

Right.

SPEAKER_04

That was, you know, allegedly on the video that he was jumped, and in the midst of him being jumped, Austin got stabbed. And they said Carmelo took off running, and they all took off running, and then all of a sudden, Austin just froze and hit the ground because he had stabbed them in the in the heart. It was so definitely self-defensive.

SPEAKER_03

You got that many people surrounding you, one person who fights one to four. That's a message or one to six, however you want to put it, because back in the day, that's how they treated our ancestors. Back in that time, it would be four or five people on one black man. We're not in that day. But did you hear about his toxology report? The Metcalf guy, he had fentanyl, he also has steroids in the system. Yes, so you thinking you're big and bad. He gave you three chances if you do this or if you do this, and then y'all gonna go jump him. He gave y'all a chance to leave him alone. It's self-defense at that time.

SPEAKER_04

I'm sorry, especially if you got that many people around you jumping on you, jumping on you, and see, you know what? I don't I don't think people are also taking account of the actual, okay. Number one, the climate of the times. Yes, we are in Trump's America, yeah, where whiteness is gold and black is trash, it's trash. There it is. Okay, so we gotta take account of that. That in my own city, I agree with you. We gotta take account of youth, young, big, white boys that's entitled. Entitled, and they feel like this not just entitled to this tent. Privileged, they are yes, privileged. They're not this is not just our tent, this is our America, and nigga, you're not only under our Tent, but you are fringing in our America and our neighborhood. Get out, get out. You're not supposed to be here. You're not supposed to have this opportunity. Now, if you are white, you will never understand the black experience. You will never understand the fear, the anxiety, you know what I'm saying? That feeling of us being on your turf where it's more you than us. Exactly. And we have to try to fit in because maybe our parents thought that taking us out of a black neighborhood where we're with ourselves, we see us, we know us, we know how to engage us. Yeah, you want to give a they wanted to give a better opportunity and put him in this white space where he has to figure out his way with all this bullying and all that stuff. Yeah, I know because I'm a parent that did it. Yeah, because but I'm saying some parents move their kids out of districts into other districts for sport so they can shine, right? You know what I mean? And sometimes them school districts be predominantly white so that they can shine, not thinking of what your child may have to go through, right? You know what I'm saying?

SPEAKER_03

And then your child doesn't, and some kids don't want to come and talk to their parents to explain what they're going through because of this movie, right?

SPEAKER_04

Because the parent is too right up on here because they want to get them seen. You are exactly right. And one thing that I should have done this show, I should have looked up to see if this was a sundown town. Because we talk about Texas, we don't know. We should have looked up the history to see what it was like in that state, right? Because you know, some of them people are probably generational people there with the same generational sentiments, so we don't know what far it was from Galveston, Texas. That was the last we don't know what the fear of this boy. Some people are probably thinking small. It's just a it could have just been a fight, and this boy got a fear of these two boys. No, it could be the fear of the environment that he's in, the social circles, everything could play a part. Who this guy's parents are, how you know, you don't know, but to say it was murder, and I've seen other cases.

SPEAKER_03

I mean, I can't quote these cases, but you see other cases where it's not murder, it's uh involuntary, sometimes uh manslaughter, or uh what's the part where you're you're justified, I forget what it's called, but anyway, it could have been a lesser charge with lesser time, right?

SPEAKER_04

Y'all act like he planned this, right? I I'm sticking, I don't know about everybody else, but I see this as self-defense. We don't know, like I said, you don't know the climate. Another thing that crossed my mind with this case, what if that baby was LGBTQ? No one probably even thought about that. Yeah, and that's a whole nother stigma because now you got people attacking you because you're black, you got people attacking you because you are LGBTQ, and don't let that baby be a film LGBTQ because that even makes it worse. Yeah, so we don't know if it's it just listen as a mother, a lot of scenarios went through my mind, right? And I'm gonna just say justice isn't justice if it's not equally applied, right? And I'm I'm gonna keep going back to that, you know. I mean, you look at our prisons, it's more people of color, black people in jail than it is the other.

SPEAKER_03

We're not giving a fair deal when you know, far as justice is concerned, and if we keep saying it and saying it and saying it's been like this, when are we gonna change it? When are people gonna get just sick and tired and sick and tired and really elevate the voice?

SPEAKER_04

Right, and I see why the topic's black man, I'm scared, right? Right, okay. So, another thing about this case. Um, and I I saw it on these YouTube streets because I follow several content creators. Um, I like to stay abreast on things because I feel like you know they dig more than the regular traditional news, like the traditional news has an angle that they try to stick with. One thing that's out on these YouTube streets is that Metcalf's father, he actually knew the judge and the prosecutor. So I don't know how true that is, but then it just still goes back to say what I was saying. Yeah, we don't know the conditions, the connections, what this boy had to go through in his day-to-day, what he experiences out there in Texas. We don't understand how it's how it is socially, right? Right.

SPEAKER_03

So, you know, and that comes down to what I was saying about systematic issues. That's an issue. If you already know the judge, the bailiff, I don't care who anybody who has something to do with it. I mean, you've seen somewhere they try them in different states that got nothing to do with nobody. You feel what I'm saying? That's a systematic issue that we hear about all the time. Somebody knows somebody, da da da and da-da-da-da. But at the end of the day, this boy was not given a fair trial, and if they do do the appeal, I hope that it's in another court, other than the same court.

SPEAKER_04

Well, why didn't you shoot to go to the Supreme Court? I'm just wondering, like, with all of this, I don't know, I don't, I'm not a lawyer, I can't even answer that.

SPEAKER_03

But I hope that they get the right people on this appeal. I'm gonna keep speaking about you know the things within the case that we see in so many other cases. You feel what I'm saying? It's just not right, and and I'm gonna go back to this.

SPEAKER_04

It's important that we vote the right people into office.

SPEAKER_03

Exercise your vote as well.

SPEAKER_04

Well, we don't know if that what the um the racial makeup is in that area.

SPEAKER_03

Well, the I say racial wasn't made up according to this young man, Carmelo Anthony. That wasn't fair at all, yeah. But y'all still went through with it and knew that it was wrong.

SPEAKER_04

So, which makes me wonder, okay, so let's let's go into what I don't know.

SPEAKER_03

Charles was going on with the lawyer.

SPEAKER_04

What was going on with the parents?

SPEAKER_03

Exactly. If you saw lackluster performance from your lawyer, why didn't you say say you gotta speak to the lawyer? This trial wasn't done in one day. You should have said something to him. I this lawyer, I the lawyer, I wasn't feeling the lawyer. You need somebody better, and then and then um I think in another clip or something, I heard there wasn't even a mitigation lawyer that could bring up things. That's crazy to me.

SPEAKER_04

Listen, what was crazy to you to talk about Met Cat Metcalf's uh past, they didn't talk about it, but to hear about that.

SPEAKER_03

This boy has steroids, fentanyl. We all know what all those things do to your to your mental. Sometimes it makes you feel like you're a superstar, supreme invincible, yes, like you were invincible and you're you know what I mean.

SPEAKER_04

What bothers me is everybody what I don't like about did you find out?

SPEAKER_03

I'm sorry to cut you off.

SPEAKER_04

What kind of knife was it? It was one of those um pocket knives that you flip out, so he would have had to really jam like it wasn't illegal, it wasn't illegal, it wasn't illegal, it wasn't illegal knives, okay.

SPEAKER_03

Because then you know, you hear some people talking about it, wasn't premeditated. That's something most boys carry in their pocket, and if it says that it was legal, shoot, most men carry, you know, one of those types that is is a corkscrew, it's got scissors on it.

SPEAKER_04

It's you know, I mean one thing that I did not like, and I don't understand because Carmelo, upon arrest, he admitted that he stabbed him, right? So I'm not understanding why they wouldn't put him on the stand exactly and allow him to share his story. It's almost like his lawyer was trying to hide the details too. Because I'm sure if Carmelo got up there, he himself could have said that I was almost just about four to six people. Yeah, he could paint the whole picture, paint the whole picture, and then you know, maybe that would have um inspired the judge or someone to say, okay, well, maybe we need to see this video. I'm saying with all that money, I wonder if the jury saw the video. I don't know, I doubt it.

SPEAKER_03

You know, you can even take the jury out to the place where things happen now, but I'm looking at $700,000. Y'all didn't do your job.

SPEAKER_04

Okay, I don't know.

SPEAKER_03

This thing here with the cost the lawyers.

SPEAKER_04

So let's talk about the parents in the family, right? Because I'm a little bit confused with Charleston White went in. Charleston White went in. He went in. He went in. Now I watched several videos. The first one he uh said, I I kind of was like digging it because he was saying that the first go fummy because their family is receiving so many threat, uh, death threats. The Ku Klux Klan was coming out, and you know, yeah, they had to relocate. Okay, I understand using the portion, you know, for that for safety, right? But then I'm hearing about mom buying new bags and hair and and and all of this stuff, and then now with Charleston in his last video, the Black Lives Matter getting involved, and oh your boy Crump. Yeah, coming out. I like attorney Crump. Um it's okay. So I don't know what Crump's wages are, but he is 75 of that money worth it. I mean, is it enough? Well, he has a team of lawyers that's under the under Crump, you know. A million dollars under his law firm, and the name itself is branded. That's like anything. Uh Nike, it's branded. Just okay, same, for example, Reebok, whatever.

SPEAKER_03

The name itself, it's branded. So you're thinking, you know, you're gonna get the best. They're their outcomes, their their wins, the losses are greater, right? You know what I'm saying? He's a civil rights attorney, right? So that's what you know.

SPEAKER_04

Yeah, well, he seems like a vulture though. I don't know. I don't I don't feel that way. That's a whole nother conversation. That's a whole nother conversation to talk about. But you know what? I don't feel so. I I would listen, I don't feel so Sean Kent's defense for Rick Chow was so eloquent that I would I would love for him to come be Carmelo's lawyer, yeah. How he defended Chow, I he would probably eat that state, the state of Texas alive. Right. So, Sean, if you are listening, or Jasmine, try get oh yeah, jasmine. She had some why don't y'all do some pro where's the pro bono? Like, where are the pro bono lawyers that are seeing this? Like, not just the cheapy weepies. I'm sorry, I know y'all need Sean and Glam Rangle, but the really good lawyers that's willing to take on this case pro bono because to me, and I don't know how you feel, Smack, 35 years is just a lot, it's excessive. It's excessive.

SPEAKER_03

I it's I do feel that it's excessive, especially when you know what the media has put out there, then you hear the court case, it's very excessive because if it was flipped around, I guarantee you it would be anywhere between eight to ten.

SPEAKER_04

Yes, if the color was switched, yes, uh and I'm gonna leave it right there. I I can roll with that. I I do I do believe I just want the appeal, I want them to honor the appeal. People need to keep expressing, people need to mobilize, people need to get involved to let them know that we not okay with this, right? And that may help for the appeal to go through. But look, please don't move. Don't this by no no no no no wait? Let me say what I'ma say don't mobilize with Charleston White being the leader because I agree with that that looks ignorant on so many levels. There are some mobile mobilization efforts going on, especially with the NAACP and this in that city. But there is mobilization going on throughout um certain parts. Trust me, it's not over. You will hear about it. I can't because I that was a mess to me. Charleston White was going in and it was a mess. Yeah, it was a mess. But you know, if you are listening, let us know what you think about the Carmelo Anthony case. Yes, also place a prayer in for this baby because he's innocent and he's going into a space where you know he's never been, and it's rough. And I pray that they don't meet, I pray that they don't greet him. I pray that the brothers inside protect him. Yes, because in every jail you got gangs, I don't care what nobody said, or groups. Let me go just say groups, aka gangs. And because of what happened to someone Caucasian, sometimes these gangs are pro-white, you know what I mean?

SPEAKER_03

Aryan nation, different types of things, and they may try to do harm to him.

SPEAKER_04

I hope that he's in like protective custody, and then you also, and I'm gonna say it, I don't care who don't like it, you gotta be careful some of the people that work there that will place that young man into danger, right? Because of how they secretly feel about what they are, which is white power. I can't fight with you on that, but listen, I'm gonna go ahead on and play the next music video, and when we come back out on the other side, we're gonna get into our topic. Black man, I'm scared. Um, please don't go nowhere. Um, once again, I'm gonna ask y'all to go ahead on and let somebody know about the Peach Radio show. Um, like, share, and subscribe. Yeah, like, share, subscribe. Catch the vision videos at Peach E T brands or inside the mobile app, the PGT Mobile app. We'll be back. Please don't go nowhere.

SPEAKER_06

We're going to look at what we cost to get male, female, but there's actually another way to go.

SPEAKER_04

Wow. Thank you, brother. Check out Beyond the Mob produced by Peach and T Fridays at 8 p.m. Time to check in sis. Are you ready to go with them? I am.

SPEAKER_11

It's time for the latest news.

SPEAKER_17

What is that, family? What the hell is going on?

SPEAKER_04

All right, so we are back. I do apologize for that news flip. It was a flick of the wrist. Um, so we are checking in, Vonda. And based off of everything that I heard tonight, that's where I came with the conclusion. Black man, I'm scared. I'm I'm scared. Um, before I talk, what did you conclude from that before we talk about the actual topic? I can tell that the climate has changed. I need, I need, I just feel like, you know, me growing up, my father was the protector. My father is still the protector. But I feel like when we get scared, we need our black men to protect us. And what I'm seeing more is women on the forefront than our black men. I'm being real. We're seeing more women, even in the YouTube channels, more women are talking about how the trajectory is changing for black people. I need to hear more men, I need to see more men formalizing and speaking up and protecting our communities. Wow. And that's how I feel. Sometimes I feel like the women's voice is more louder. Yeah. And it is a little scary place at some points in time. And I've and sometimes just even in my local community, there are people who are in position, who are quiet, who black men run these organizations, these nonprofits, these churches, and not stepping in and can see the wrongdoings. So yeah, I'm calling out to black men. I love the topic. I'm scared. They should be taking, they should be coming forth, they should be stepping up more and protecting us. That's how I feel. Not the case, you just don't have sexual relations with men, but you still need men in the forefront. Do you see them like as to today, right? As a lesbian, because I do want to reach men that's listening out there, and I love that we have this topic, and you are here. Um, as a lesbian, how do you view men in? How you know how should they be functioning in everyday society, even though you don't date? I don't date them, no, but I do I look at how my father and my brothers treat our family, they are the matriarchs, they are the protectors, they're the patriarchs. I wanted to correct you say matriarchs, yeah. They are the yeah, you know what I'm saying, and so they are my protectors.

SPEAKER_03

If there's something I feel I can't do, I can't, you know, get through. I call my dad, I call my brothers. If I'm going through something, and and I feel like men are supposed to handle certain things, women, we can do all things, don't get me wrong, but certain things the man has to lead, and that's how I feel. As a protector, the men should be stepping forward, and the women should be in the back. No matter if I'm gay, if I'm in church, or whatever, the man should be out front protecting us, stepping in, but we're not seeing that. We're seeing more men pulling out their phones, encouraging bad behavior instead of stopping it. You see what I'm saying?

SPEAKER_04

Meaning, like fights at clubs, at parties, or in the street, they're pulling out their phones more so than the females, right? They should be protecting us and standing up for us, and we're not getting that, right? Right, they should be on that front line. So in your advocacy, and you are in these rooms and you are at these events, it's more women, the population is like like if you had to put it in percentage, is it 80 women, 20 men, or six? How would you put it? If we're talking about black men, I'm scared.

SPEAKER_03

I'm gonna say it's 90 women, 10 men.

SPEAKER_04

I in the rooms that I'm in, and what I'm advocating at it's more women, black women than black men, and you advocate your major issues probation reform, justice reform. That is that is even mind boggling to me. It's mind boggling, like okay.

SPEAKER_03

Let me tell you, I was just at a at a at a um rally, right? For voting rights, right? I'm just gonna put it out there voting rights. It was more Caucasian people than black people, and the black people that was there, it was I'm gonna say out of 15, it was two men and the rest were women.

SPEAKER_04

Did you get a chance to talk to the men? Did they tell you why they were there? They were there to support the um the um John Lord's voting rights act for Delaware, and that they could see that we needed to push this to reserve our right, and and they were young black men. Oh wow, not older black men, young black men for our state. You feel me?

SPEAKER_03

Right, and and and and that just like I looked around, I look at the picture still today, and I shake my head. Hasn't been a hundred years hardly that we've been able to women have been able to have our right to vote, right?

SPEAKER_21

Or black people being able to vote ain't been that long, and y'all don't care.

SPEAKER_04

Wow, so yeah, I understand, black man, I'm scared now. You scared you know what? How did you feel when I asked you to come on this show? Black man, I'm scared when you heard this. The words were you like, why? She's like, Yeah, I did. I was like, where's she getting this from?

SPEAKER_03

But I was like, well, let's go. Because I mean, me as a black lesbian woman, what woman, when I'm feel scared, I go to my dad, my brothers, and that's about feeling scared about anything. I can go to my mom and get her perspective, but you don't feel protected by your mom.

SPEAKER_04

I feel protected, I feel protected by the men in my life, my my dad, my brothers, and I'm only a girl. But it's just that it comes from my upbringing. My dad shielded me from things, my grandfather shielded us from things so that we didn't have to go through it.

SPEAKER_03

My brothers still today, both of them, shield me from things so that I don't have to experience it or share stories and tell me how I need to act. You see what I'm saying? It's just like me going to advocate to get a confederate flag. My brothers is like, don't do it. This don't, sis. I understand, you know, you're an activist, you're an advocate, but I feel something, don't go down there.

SPEAKER_04

You feel me? So when you have that kind of relationship with the men in your life or friends that are men, because there are men out here today that I look up to in my community, and I'm wondering why aren't you out here on these front lines where it matters in making your voice heard so that we as women, as youth, as whatever children feel secured. Okay, wow, that's that's strong, that's deep. And listen, audience, this is coming from a lesbian woman. So if you are a black man or melanated man or whatever you call yourself, and you are listening and you had that um false thought that lesbians don't need men, then tonight we have a lesbian tell you that they, you know, need lesbians need men as shields to be in the forefront. Because let me let me add this in here. You know, people look at me and think I want to be a man. I don't want to be a man, I don't want to be a man at all.

SPEAKER_03

Men have certain jobs out here in our in our ecosystem of black people. Men have a job, no matter what your orientation is. Our black men have a job, right? It is not for you to get on here and talk bad about women. What we're going through right now, women need to feel secured. I don't care what you are, I feel secured with certain things, but what we're going through right now, I should see an army of black men before I even open my mouth.

SPEAKER_04

Well, I ain't gotta open my mouth, or you know, army standing while you're on the podium because they exactly want the message out there, and they're there as the shield, the protection. Exactly. Point point mentioned, point taken, and and yes, wow, yeah, there was a time that I did feel that, but in this time, I don't know if it's education and know what our ancestors went through. I don't know what it is. You know what? I think it's the climate. I feel you know, not to cut you off. I think it's the climate. I feel you know, me as a woman that has the capacity to date men. I don't, you know, I can date men, I don't have an issue with them. I've been married. The time now calls for masculine influence because I feel like in this nation, Trump is such a figurehead for the white community, and the white men are stepping up to protect themselves that we feel unarmed, yeah, because the women out the melanated women are already in the forefront, and now we're standing and we're against a force of men, yes, and that's you know what it feels like in these spaces, and instead of our black melanated men saying, Okay, the white men are standing, we gotta take a stand. It's like why stand? Yeah, we need somebody that you stand, and to even go further, because I know you are a lesbian, but I have the capacity, I feel like the black man don't love us no more, and I think that it shows or it ain't directly involving them, it don't got nothing to do with me. Why should I speak on it? No, right, because this is what I'm saying. That's the mentality. Let me break it down. I feel like the black man, and if you are a black man, feel free to come go under the comment section of this video, let me know how you feel because these are my thoughts, and I'm not gonna apologize for them. I don't feel like you love us anymore, I feel like you're leaving us out the dry, and because you don't love us and respect us the way that you should publicly, other races don't respect and love us either. And when the male of any culture, any ethnic group steps back, then other men from other ethnic groups feel like they can either one step in or they can either destroy, yeah, and once it trickles down to the woman and they realize that we're defenseless, who are they coming after next? Our children, our children, our children become expendable. So while you're standing back for whatever reason it is, I like I said, I personally feel like y'all don't love us anymore. Like with these cases, I don't see okay, like this this this lawyer I keep saying this eloquent. I can't see how he could even take that job to sit there to have that eloquent defense against a young black boy Cyrus that's gone, he's dead and gone. How could you not see yourself in that child? How do you not see yourself right though? How do you not see your mother when you see that black mother crying for her child? Exactly. How do you not see look at that man and say, I could be that black man in that family, right? Though you know why, because you don't have the love the way you used to, so whatever that disconnect is, you need to reconnect it. Well, our race is gone. Oh, yeah, and I know I've here I've heard so many theories. Well, the men that's out here is not the uh the warrior class of men, they're in jail. That's why we don't have men boots on the ground. A lot of the men I've heard women say, Oh, well, it's like this because a lot of the men are LGBTQ, but I'm here to tell y'all what I'm saying too applies to LGBTQ men too. Exactly, you need to stand too, and furthermore, only I think it's it's less than two percent of the United States that is LGBTQ, so that's not a defense. So two percent 98. That's not a defense, that's not a defense at all. At all. I don't know who is putting that mess out, right? So I'm telling y'all, I'm truly women lie, but numbers don't. Yes, I am truly scared. I don't feel like y'all love us black men. I think it's more whatever it is that's sitting on your heart is more important than the survival of our race, is more important than being a father, is more important than generational wealth, is more important than uh circulating our wealth, wealth building, growth, black wall street. None of this is gonna happen until you men get up, take the reins. Because I could tell you right now, as a woman with two nonprofits, you could probably tell them as an advocate, it could be a woman with a doctrine. We can walk inside of a building, and these white men, these Chinese men, these Hispanic men, any kind of man wants to address what a man, they don't want to address us, no, they don't want to deal with us like that. No, what's that line? I love it in the show. Take me to your leader, and every time you go to every ethnic person leader is a what woman, it's a man, I mean a man, yeah, yeah. Not us, right? And then um, I'm I'm uh I'm gonna leave it on this black man. What are you scared of? Yeah, what are you scared of, black man? I think I think they don't want to put that time in for the change, and for me, everybody changes different. For me, I believe the only way this shit changes is if everything is thrown away. Like I know a lot of people like you want to advocate, want to get in the system and trying to work within. I think the whole system needs to be obliterated, and we need to start from scratch. It would be nice if we could do that. Yeah, that's just my personal, but if we can't do it, right? Right, we need more voices, more voices, we need more male voices. Yep, we do, and if we can't do that, then we need to build and work from within, like all the other classes, all the other races, yep. Chinatown, this town, Hispanic town. Where's Black Town? Yeah, where's melanated town? Whatever we can't even decide on what to call ourselves. Exactly. We don't want to be Africans, we don't want to be melanated, we don't want to be Caribbean, we don't. It's just it's all a mess. Yeah, we gotta get it together, yeah. But I'm gonna leave on that. Black man, what are you scared of? Black man, I am scared. I am scared, I am scared because if they come for us, they coming for us, they're coming for me, and they're coming for my children because I don't see no black man that's gonna stand for me. That's true, they don't make them like that no more. Y'all, y'all standing for whatever it is that's convenient for you for the day. I wish I could see 10,000 black men like my father, and you know what the excuse would be. What well, y'all don't want us to leave because y'all don't listen, but the my famous line is always, what are you leading me to? Ha ha, I like that. Yes, what are you leading me to? It's a yeah, that is there's a lot of truth in that. Yeah, if you're not leaving me, leading me to salvation for our race, if you're not leading me into a better life, if you're not leading me into empowerment, if you're not leading me into a space where we can improve our community, what are you leading to? What are you leading me to exactly because I could lead myself into some, I could lead myself into drugs, I could lead myself into all why do I need you for that? I need you to help uplift, you know, and it's crazy because black men, I'm scared because I'm watching black women decide to be alone instead of being with black men. So, where does that leave the the race, the population of us? How do how do we continue to grow? That's a lot to think about right there. I hope y'all are listening, black men. And no, they're not all lesbians, they just don't want to deal with you because you're not leading them nowhere, right? And where does that leave our children? Black men, I'm scared. I have two daughters, I'm afraid for my daughters to have children. I want them to have kids with black men. I have one granddaughter, I am afraid for my daughter to have another child. I'm afraid for the other daughter to have a child, you know why? Because if that child ends up like Cyrus or Carmella, where's the black man standing in that space? Exactly. Black man, I'm afraid, I'm scared. I am freaking scared. Facts because while you're sitting here waiting for me to uplift you, I'm waiting for you to protect me and my family. There it is. There it is. It's too much going on here. Exactly. I'm watching all of everybody. Love the YouTube streets, but nobody wants to watch it for what it you know what it is for learning, learn the real ones, right? The real streets, these white men is prepping, saving, preparing. The trafficking is done by mostly who that's a whole nother the human trafficking. I don't even want to get into it. Y'all now listen. If they was if black men was policing the neighborhoods, how are they gonna come in your neighborhood and human traffic and shit like that? Yes, if you know, like a situation like that is on the rise, it should be black men, you know, policing our own streets. Put some rules out there for households. Here, your kids need to be in the house by a certain time. Here is the funniest thing if a rick child knew that it was a black rick child in the hood, you think he would have shot and killed that boy, or would he have gave that boy water out of respect?

SPEAKER_03

But it gave him water out of respect.

SPEAKER_04

Men respect men. Let me get his boy water out of respect because I don't want to deal with uh I don't know Bubba Bubba King K part nine coming in here. No, I don't want that kind of action, but Rick Child said, I could kill this little boy, ain't gonna happen to me. Yep, I'ma kill him, go to court, get through it, ain't gonna happen. No, black man, I'm scared. Black man, I'm scared. That case right there should have every black man wanting to come together in the neighborhood and talk to young boys, even just families, and just be mentors and and take a stand. I don't believe that boy would let a strong, good community of men. That boy wouldn't even been in there getting no damn water. Nope, he probably wouldn't even had to go to that store because black men will have their own stores for you to go to. We need more and get your water. So, black men, I'm scared for multiple reasons. I don't feel appreciated, I don't feel loved, I don't feel protected, and I definitely don't feel protective, don't feel provided for, and I don't feel like I'm gonna find one that's gonna be there. We need your voice need to be louder, not even a friend. Your voice needs to be louder, we need to feel our black men, your presence, yeah, for real. We do, we do because right now the expectations that a black woman have of you, sir, black man. What we think is that we when we think about princes, we don't think about you. We're raised that we gotta be together, we gotta be able to provide for ourselves, and if we have children, we gotta be able to take care of them because you may not be there. Yeah, we have very low expectations of y'all, but your expectations of us is high, and then y'all slowly down. I hope you know everybody got something from this. Um I like to thank you for coming on. Um your voice was needed. I love having a lesbian perspective for the show. Do you have any final closing out words? Anything you got from this broadcast? Man, look, I got a lot from this broadcast. Um, thank you for allowing me to use my voice and to be um open and transparent with how I feel. Um everybody can find me at Fight Light SmackDown or just yeah, put in at Fight Light Smack and you'll find me. Um Smack said it. But uh thank you. This is a very great show. And uh I tune in all the time. I don't know if you know that. But this is a great show. It really hits on topics that a lot of people really don't think about. But uh my last thing that I wanna say black man, why are you scared to stand up? Stand up. Well, that was our show as usual. I had a great time. I'm so glad that y'all joined us. Please follow, like, and share in the mix radio on all major platforms. I'm telling you, it's so lit. You can actually just type in in the mix in your search bar, and it's gonna pop up everywhere. Everywhere, everywhere. And if you love me, please tune in every Sunday at 12 noon where I'll be talking my ish. And I pray that the black men across America will be looking for my black ass after everything I see tonight. Black man is still time to change it around. When will you stand up? Oh my god. All right, so yeah, I'm gonna close it out. I'm gonna leave y'all with a couple of my favorite um go-to's when I'm down and out. Um, my music videos. One by Miss Kelly, I'm only human, and then Dollar in a Dream by Songbird the Goddess. Yes, I love her so much. Um please follow me. P E T. Download it and go to both app stores. It's there waiting for you. Or follow me on YouTube at PGE T brands, okay? Follow me. And the upload for this show, it will be maybe I'll upload it tonight on YouTube, and then y'all can start liking and sharing and get my um what is it, watch hours up. Oh my god. But um, that is it for me. I will catch y'all next Sunday at 12 noon. Please follow me for all the fabulous shows that I stream on PGE and T brands. I love y'all. Have a fabulous, fabulous Sunday. And you know what, y'all have a great day.

unknown

I'm only here, man, I'll be here, I'm only here, man. I'm only here, man, I'll be here, man. I'm only here, man, I'll be here.

SPEAKER_08

I am flesh, I am blood, I am life, I am love, I'm only human, I'm only human, I am joy, I am pain. We all be the same, only human, only human, I got love, I got power, I got feelings, emotions, love and emotion, I'm human, I'm only human I'm on the human I'm on the human I am fresh, I am bad, I am black, I am love, I'm on him, I'm laughing, I am joy, I am pain, all in the same, all the human I got I got power I got feeling emotion, love it, emotion, I'm human, I got feeling, emotion, love, emotion, I'm human, I got I got I am I am I I am the I'm I am joy, I am pain, all in the pain, I'm the I'm the light, I'm the trees in your life You're the stars in the sky, you're the trees in my eye, I'm all here What's the point in being different if they don't hate on you anyway?

SPEAKER_05

I tried to be like y'all, but it messed with my spirit in a different way. I lift my head up to the sky, what's my purpose? And if I sell out for this bag, is it worth it? Treat my morals and my values like they're worthless. For only in a wall full of purches. Nothing even matters to me anyway. I keep a dollar in a dream on me. I keep a dollar in a dream on me. I know I'm okay. I keep a dollar in a dream on me. I keep a dollar in a dream on me. I know I'm okay. See it's okay when they do it, but it's a problem when I do it. Then I'm too style if it go through this And put me down when I'm not with them but against them. Then tell lies because the enemy is vegetable. Yeah, you won't knock me up buttons, but oh no, I'm protected by my ancestors You can't touch a child up die You can't touch me, can't touch me. No, you can't I keep a dollar in a dream on me.

unknown

I keep a dollar in a dream on me.

SPEAKER_05

I know I can die I keep a dollar in a dream on me. I keep a dollar in a dream on me. I know I die I just want to go to be a little bit I know I complete. I know I know I just wanna go to be a big baby I know I complete I know I know I keep a dollar in a dream on me, I keep a dollar in a dream on me, I know I complete I love I keep a dollar in a dream on me. I keep a dollar in a dream on me. I know I'm okay. Let's go, Peach.

SPEAKER_16

They know that I'm crazy retall. They know that I'm crazy with tall. My shooters run down, no talking. I don't got time for the bark. Bitch, I'ma pull up and park it. They know that I'm crazy with.