All In Your Bizz w/ Reka & Los

From Defrosting The Turkey To Demanding Justice For A Chicago Mom

Los & Reka

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Holiday planning meets hard truth. We kick off with practical meal prep—why you should thaw the turkey now, when to buy biscuits instead of baking, and how to stretch leftovers into tacos, pot pie, salad, and soup without crossing the food safety line. We get honest about when to toss what’s in the fridge, how to avoid dry turkey, and why smoked, jerk, and fried can keep the table lively. There’s laughter over chitlins and the great ham-versus-turkey debate, plus the perfect bite that stacks yams, mac, greens, and dressing on a single fork.

Then the tone shifts. A viral attack on a Chicago mother with her child forces a conversation about respect, community standards, and accountability. We talk about what happens when kids harass neighbors, destroy property, and target adults with no fear of consequences. Parents, schools, and the wider community all have a role—whether that looks like counseling and mentoring, legal action, or firm boundaries that actually stick. Cameras are everywhere and tensions are high, especially in the holiday season; the question isn’t whether we see the problem, but whether we’ll act quickly and fairly to protect people and reset norms.

We don’t sugarcoat it, but we do offer a path forward: set clear expectations at home, support educators with consistent policies and restorative tools, and build local programs that give kids attention, structure, and real stakes. Along the way, we keep the kitchens humming—sharing safe leftover timelines, smart shopping moves, and traditions that bring joy without burning anyone out. If you’ve got thoughts on leftover limits or what real accountability looks like, we want to hear them. Subscribe, share this with a friend who’s hosting, and leave a review to help more listeners find the conversation.

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SPEAKER_01:

I figured that thing admitts some teeth.

SPEAKER_00:

Merry Krumble.

SPEAKER_01:

And I will say Merry Christmas because I already know what I translated.

SPEAKER_00:

Okay.

SPEAKER_01:

I already know.

SPEAKER_00:

I just like to hear that. Merry Krumble.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah. Okay. So, you know, this is a time to like start getting your recipes and everything together. Yeah. You know, get your stuff ready and prepared because you don't have nothing but like maybe like a couple weeks or less.

SPEAKER_00:

Two weeks. Maybe a week and a half.

unknown:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

So Thanksgiving.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, you may want to go ahead and start defrosting that turkey.

SPEAKER_01:

Please. Start defrosting. Get yourself together because if you're not certain about, you know, you're not real comfortable with making something and you ain't made it before, don't do it.

SPEAKER_00:

So don't try no new recipes. Is that what you're doing?

SPEAKER_01:

People are stressed out at this time of year. Oh, yeah. A lot of stuff's going on. Stick with what you know. Stick with what you know.

SPEAKER_00:

That's true.

SPEAKER_01:

And sticking with what you know, it can also mean you just go on somewhere and pick it up. That's what I'll do.

SPEAKER_00:

Or go somewhere and eat. Go somewhere and eat. Yeah, that's okay too.

SPEAKER_01:

It ain't that ain't cheating. You want to go get some biscuits somewhere from somewhere else. Some biscuits. You want to go out and get some biscuits from somewhere, you know, and bring them to the uh event, it's all good.

SPEAKER_00:

So it's not wise for somebody to go buy some active yeast and sit it out and try to make bread and do up. No, don't do that.

SPEAKER_01:

Don't mess with that ease. You know, don't mess with that ease. Don't mess with ease.

unknown:

Okay.

SPEAKER_01:

I'm about to say something, you know.

SPEAKER_03:

Message. Okay.

SPEAKER_01:

But you know what? So, you know, just do, you know, just be just be thankful. You know, even if you can't get everything that you wanted to get or cook whatever you want to cook, just be thankful because people are rolling up out of here every single moment.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, and and if if you somebody cooks some greens and they don't have the pork, I just saw a video where the guy said he wants, he doesn't want his greens with turkey. He wants some pork. He put a big K on it. He said, Turkey greens taste too light. He wants Thanksgiving his meals to be heavy. He wants them fully saturated with seasoning, lard, and pork.

SPEAKER_01:

So yeah, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, and shout out too. Because I know we always say it on the podcast and all. So I know them food stamps, they should be kicking in soon.

SPEAKER_00:

Hopefully.

SPEAKER_01:

Holler at a brother.

SPEAKER_00:

Oh, now now you now you want some stamps.

SPEAKER_01:

Because I know they probably piled up. Okay. Don't eat a lot, you know, just a couple turkeys.

SPEAKER_00:

Dang. A couple of turkeys?

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00:

Do you like turkey like that?

SPEAKER_01:

Um, I do. Like, I really actually like fried turkey.

SPEAKER_00:

Oh, yeah, fried turkey is good. I like uh jerk turkey legs. And I like I like a do I like fried turkey? I like smoked and jerk.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, I like smoked and jerk and all that because fried isn't bad either.

SPEAKER_00:

No, it's just it just can't be dry and bland, you know, because it's like that's a lot of yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

But you can you can do a lot of things to turkey, you know. Once you get tired of it, you know, just I I I can put it and put it right in and fry or steer it a little bit, and I'm Gucci.

SPEAKER_00:

So would you turn okay, you have a 20-pound turkey. So the first two days you're eating, you're eating sliced turkey, then you you fry it.

SPEAKER_01:

You get tired of it.

SPEAKER_00:

And then are you what else are you making? Turkey tacos, turkey pot pie?

SPEAKER_01:

You make turkey salad, soup. You can you can turn it.

SPEAKER_00:

You can do it, when do you let it go? When is when is it time to say, you know what, when the carcass is left and you just got the frame of the bird?

SPEAKER_01:

Long as you ain't getting no gristle, like it's good. Like if I get the white meat, I'm good. Or maybe even the dark meat to a certain point. But if it's mixed with gristle, I don't want it.

SPEAKER_00:

Okay.

SPEAKER_01:

Okay, so that's how that's how I so that should be maybe a conversation.

SPEAKER_00:

Like, how long do you keep the leftovers?

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, that's a good question. Yeah, because I mean that gets let us know what you how long do you keep leftovers, you know, because it past three days.

SPEAKER_00:

If you eat leftovers, Thanksgiving, and I know, you know, certain folks, groups of people like to have fried chicken or fried turkey, baked turkey, uh Cajun turkey, turkey, Malaysian turkey, all the different types of turkey and pans of seafood dressing, regular dressing, turkey dressing, at some point you gotta let it go. How long do you keep all that food? And where are you stored? Are you storing it at your next door neighbor's house?

SPEAKER_01:

Are you freezing it?

SPEAKER_00:

What you doing?

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, we want to know. How can they let us know? We we really want to know what you're doing with this turkey.

SPEAKER_00:

Email and let us know. All in your biz25 at gmail.com. We need to know what you're doing with all this food.

SPEAKER_01:

Well, no, well, this turkey. Even like ham.

SPEAKER_00:

Like ham is good because you can eat ham like for breakfast and in the business. But ham won't taste old like turkey does.

SPEAKER_01:

I think after it sits so long, it gets saltier.

SPEAKER_00:

You think so? I do. It could be.

SPEAKER_01:

Uh it's maybe it's in my mind. I mean, I can I'll I'll choose turkey over uh ham, but I like a good ham longer than that that thick meat.

SPEAKER_00:

I like this light. You you like the meat to be so thin you can see through it.

SPEAKER_01:

I like that. I don't want like because I want to know what I'm biting into because you know, I I don't want the big, big it's not like you're eating the part by all the bone where all the fat is.

SPEAKER_00:

Like you're not doing that. So you like a spiraled ham.

SPEAKER_01:

Real nice spiral with some with the brown sugar on top and all that good stuff.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, that's good. And you like um, I you know what I think the perfect fork. So you have your plate, right? So you take your fork, you get a little bit of ham, you get a little bit of yams, then you get a little bit of mac and cheese, you get a little greens, and then you need something else, a little bit something savory, a little bit of dressing, and you put all that on one fork, that bite tastes amazing. And a little bit of potato salad. That bite, that that bite tastes amazing.

SPEAKER_01:

You're making me hungry.

SPEAKER_00:

I'm just saying.

SPEAKER_01:

You're making me hungry because when I first sat down here, I was pissed. But you're making me hungry. Okay, you're making me hungry.

SPEAKER_00:

You should start your working on your Thanksgiving menu so that you can, you know.

SPEAKER_01:

But guess what? We gotta get down to business because I gotta get this out.

SPEAKER_00:

Okay, what you got?

SPEAKER_01:

Can we talk about why in the hell did you see the kids that jumped the mama in Chicago? Yes, and the the son and the baby, yeah. She is gone too far.

SPEAKER_00:

That was disgusting because I like I saw it, but I couldn't even continue to watch. I was so like I felt anxious, I felt sad hearing that baby scream for his mother, seeing them throw the woman on the ground and just kick her and jump. That was disgusting.

SPEAKER_01:

Very disgusting.

SPEAKER_00:

That was wrong, very vital.

SPEAKER_01:

Very, very, very, very it. I mean, literally almost stared at the wall and dropped a tear. Yeah. Because nobody I'm so pissed right now.

SPEAKER_00:

Nobody deserves that. And the kids you know better. And if you don't know better, I hope something happens to where law enforcement is involved.

SPEAKER_01:

I hope they get involved and they get in trouble.

SPEAKER_00:

And their parents, and the whoever is responsible for these kids. That's what I want to talk about.

SPEAKER_01:

The parents. The parents should be in trouble.

SPEAKER_00:

What kind of parents do these kids have? These are some wild hyenas. Like this makes no sense.

SPEAKER_01:

Right. And I read also that this is not the first time something like this is happening.

SPEAKER_00:

So they do this all the time.

SPEAKER_01:

Right. They'd be vandalizing cars and harassing other adults.

SPEAKER_00:

So what's going on in that area?

SPEAKER_01:

Something's going on in that area. However, those kids ought to be accounted, they ought to be their parents. Their parents ought to go to jail. They should be sued. Those kids should, you know, and I know it's bad and all, however, but they should be in foster care if they cannot be treated correctly.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, if they don't have any property, no guidance.

SPEAKER_01:

And they need to be a ward of the state.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Number one. I'm gonna just put it on how it is. Now, if that was me, like those kids, and it I know it may sound bad, and I mean we probably get a lot of emails and all, but email me.

SPEAKER_00:

And they may, yeah, they may be troubled children, but they may have gone through some things, but that does not does not allow them to disrespect that woman and her child that way, no matter what you've gone through.

SPEAKER_01:

And it looked like I don't know if it's sure or not. I think I read some stories that she was pregnant, some say she was not. But however, if I have eight, nine kids jumping me and my son, however, we walked from school, I'm popping your ass. I'm gonna tell you that right now. All y'all, I don't care how old you are, if you jumping us however it is, and this is going on however it is, I'm gonna defend myself. I'm gonna defend my child. And popping, let me make sure, let me make sure it's clear. Popping is gonna be you're gonna be playing a lot of funerals. I'm not that is it's just it's just too much. So I'd rather be I'm sure whatever. And I, you know, and I think if that lady would have did something like that, however it is, I'm sure.

SPEAKER_00:

Well, then I'm sure her parents would have been, you know, they would have said, hey, people well, they're gonna say something.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, these are the things. People are gonna say, but you know what? Let me put your hand against the ground and pull your wig and hit you all in the stomach and chest, and then you're your child sitting there.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, that's not okay.

SPEAKER_01:

Come and come holl at me. Okay. You can know we we can take this further than the email, okay? Come holler at me. So if anybody thinks different, like, well, no, you shouldn't have said that, whatever. This is my podcast and not yours, but they're gonna get popped, all of them, okay? And then I wish their parents would come too, because they'll get popped too. Sister, cousin, whatever it is, it's just not okay.

SPEAKER_00:

And it's not okay, and at some point, we as a community have to hold parents and their children accountable and responsible for their actions. Like, where is the line crossed to where kids? I remember back in our day, like you you couldn't disrespect an adult, you couldn't cuss, you couldn't be loud, your your pants better not be hanging off. We didn't even do that back in our day. But kids now have no respect or no regard for authority and or or people, human beings, adults, elders, it's like they just do whatever, and that's not okay. So we need to go back to the old school where you raise your children to be respectful. And if I'm not around and another adult sees you misbehaving, they're gonna correct you. And then once I find out, I will definitely correct you. Because if I would have known that that was one of my children or my grandchildren, nieces or nephews on that video kicking that woman, they would have been dragged. It's not okay, it's not acceptable to ever do something like that to anybody.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, it's not. And I and I hate it.

SPEAKER_00:

It's disgusting.

SPEAKER_01:

I that that child is gonna be scarred for life.

SPEAKER_00:

Yes.

SPEAKER_01:

Even that adult would be scarred for life, you know, and I don't like it. It's something that shouldn't be pushed under the rug.

SPEAKER_00:

No.

SPEAKER_01:

And you they have to learn somebody needs to somebody needs to be accountable for that.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, I agree.

SPEAKER_01:

The kids can go to juvenile, the parents, you know, like they should be sued. If you can't take care of them, whatever. And I hate saying that about our own kind.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

But what's right is right, and I don't wanna care what color they was. If you're doing stuff and you out here harassing people and you know, doing, you know what, you deserve everything that comes to you. And I'm gonna just be honest. If you out here thinking you can just like adults, so these small elementary kids and imagine what they're gonna grow up doing.

SPEAKER_00:

Yes. And I can only imagine if they do this outside of the school or walking from school, home. Can you imagine how they behave with in the classroom?

SPEAKER_01:

Exactly. Exactly. So I'm sure they're gonna probably do some some facts finding and checking and kind of looking, however, you know what it may be. But I hope that the the city of Chicago doesn't move slow on this. Yeah. I hope they, you know, they get the right people in place and they start investigating this thing and they make a swift decision. And you know, to do this is something you can't just sit on just for like months and months and months and months because it's some I was reading there are people in that community like they're pissed.

SPEAKER_00:

As they should be.

SPEAKER_01:

They are pissed. And then a lot of people in the neighborhood know who these kids are.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

They know it all, they know their whole DNA.

SPEAKER_00:

So it seems as if if if people in the community know these kids and then they've seen them behave this way before, that means there's no guidance and no structure at home.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, right. One lady said, I don't know how true it is, but I was reading, she's saying that that these kids, this is not the first time that something like this happened. These group of kids just go around and they just do whatever terrorizing the neighborhood, huh? Right. Like they damn Heathcliff or something, you know, just going terrorizing the neighborhood and all. But I hate it for, like I say, I hate it. I just hate it. Like I literally almost.

SPEAKER_00:

It's disgusting. It's so disgusting and it's so sad how like I want to find kids myself. And whoop them just. Yeah, it's not okay.

SPEAKER_01:

Their cheeks would be so damn swollen when I'm done. Do you be thinking like they in a Luke video?

SPEAKER_00:

What? What why didn't Luke catch uh straight?

SPEAKER_01:

That's how big the ass would be. But I hate it. It just it did something to me, and I didn't want to watch to the end, but I feel like I needed to. Yeah. I feel like I needed to watch it to the end and all because this is uncalled for.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, and we need to get back as a community and making children. And it's hard.

SPEAKER_01:

You think you think it's gonna? I mean, I don't know if it can never go back.

SPEAKER_00:

I I don't you're right.

SPEAKER_01:

I don't know if you're gonna be able to do it. You can't even you can't even give a student a high five without somebody trying to sue. You know, like you can't, you know, back in the days, we used to get hit on the hand. Did you always get hit on the hand? Your parents used to have to sign the slip, right? And if you did something wrong.

SPEAKER_00:

Like the little ruler of the big fat pencil.

SPEAKER_01:

No, it was it was his big ass board.

unknown:

Oh.

SPEAKER_01:

And only the principal can do it. You would hit your stick your hand out, and I remember my principal name, his name was Mr. Lockett. You stick your hand out, and he would hit it like four or five times, like fast as I don't know what.

SPEAKER_00:

Like what?

SPEAKER_01:

Fast. And then and then also you can get hit on your bottom too, like one or two times. But you have to go to the office and they would administer the spanking.

SPEAKER_00:

So let me ask you, if you were a principal, right, of this school were these kids. So do you think back in the day when the principals were able to uh paddle kids, do you think that they would paddle harder for certain kids that they didn't like, or do you think it was all the same strength of paddling?

SPEAKER_01:

Probably it wasn't the same strength. Okay.

SPEAKER_00:

You don't think so?

SPEAKER_01:

No, because some kids, you know, they they may need, you know, need a little couple extra uh they may need a a nail in the front.

SPEAKER_00:

What?

SPEAKER_01:

A nail in the front.

SPEAKER_00:

They needed a little more bite force.

SPEAKER_01:

They needed a boost. But you know, those things were in place back then, and I think it worked. Because I didn't want to go to the office no more and get hit on my hand or whatever.

SPEAKER_00:

So you think it was it worked because it was fear that they would be hit?

SPEAKER_01:

Maybe so. But whatever it did, it worked.

SPEAKER_00:

Okay.

SPEAKER_01:

Okay, now kids like they want to buck up against teachers. They, you know, they want to buck up against authority.

SPEAKER_00:

But see, those things aren't in place anymore, but now it's like a pathway to jail.

SPEAKER_01:

So yeah, yeah, a pathway to jail or getting shot.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, they're they're not, you know, disciplining, you know, physical, there's no physical discipline in the school, but they are keeping record on behaviors. And, you know, these kids are slowly going to, you know, alternative schools, and then as a result from there, you know, detention centers and jail. So it's not just sad. Yeah, it's it's really sad.

SPEAKER_01:

But it's no accountability. It's not, it boils down to no accountability. You have parents or guardians out here, they're just living their life, doing whatever, and kids are probably I'm not gonna say private, kids are out here raising themselves, yeah. Like they're probably not even in they're probably not even in the home. Like kids are just out here doing whatever, staying out to whatever, doing whatever, and then you expect them to come to school, and it's just okay, and if they're going to school, yeah, you know, and it's like you gotta be accountable for it because that's the same little Ronnie that's gonna be trying to open up my car door and do all this, however, or try to enter to my home. And I would hate it for like little Ronnie and all because I want to see, especially us, I want to see us be the next, you know, the president, the next, whatever it is. But if you come up up in here, I'm gonna make sure you're looking at me. Don't want to get them in the back, but I'm gonna catch you.

SPEAKER_00:

So if you have children, or if you have children that you mentor, or nieces and nephews, grandkids, talk to your children, right? Please let them know that they are not entitled to put their hands on people, they're not entitled to other people's property, right, to other people's vehicles, to other people's things. And there's a consequence very well, much slower. If they take advantage of that and do what they feel like they want to do with somebody else's things, right, and they'll be on the t-shirt, then you're gonna have the GoFundMe's and all this stuff here for some s something so so stupid. Just just raise your kids. And if you don't want to raise your kids, then you don't have to have kids. There's there's options for that too, right?

SPEAKER_01:

But it takes keep them legs closed. Keep them shut.

SPEAKER_00:

It takes it takes effort, not just having the kid and putting an earring in their ear and buying them Jordans for them to, you know, you have to actively engage and rent offer love, offer support, offer all of the things that they need to be successful, not just I'm gonna just you just hear and you go outside and play and follow what other kids do. Right, we don't do that.

SPEAKER_01:

No, that's why this year for Christmas, I'm giving out rubbers. I'm giving out rubbers, okay? Condoms. Rubbers, Jimmy ads. Okay, okay.

SPEAKER_00:

So what what what is a nine-year-old kid gonna do with a rubber?

SPEAKER_01:

I'm talking about some of these parents out here. Stop having these little badass kids.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, I agree.

SPEAKER_01:

Because the pull-out game ain't way where it need to be, yeah. Whatever it is, you need rubbers, okay. And I can't.

SPEAKER_00:

Just take all the organs and just remove the parts so where you can't even just reproduce, like another.

SPEAKER_01:

You ain't got no feeling, and so you don't even want to do it.

SPEAKER_00:

Just remove all your feelings, yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Because this stuff is going too far. And I hate and I hate it. I'm all about supporting.

SPEAKER_00:

Let's get it under control.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, let's let's it's going crazy, and then you want to get attitude.

SPEAKER_00:

And don't be offended when somebody tells you about your kid. Right. You want to get attitude. You know your kid is dead.

SPEAKER_01:

You know this.

SPEAKER_00:

But nobody else can say it.

SPEAKER_01:

Please.

SPEAKER_00:

Don't do that.

SPEAKER_01:

Lil' Ronnie, I put him over my knee and I pop the I think I would fight Lil Ronnie, like, square up.

SPEAKER_00:

Like.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, I ain't I ain't have it. You know, like I ain't have it with little Ronnie. You know what I'm saying? I ain't have with no UIs out there neither. I'm gonna be I'm gonna be honest. Like, I'm not, I am not no play with you. Um, you can call me OG, you can call me whatever it is, but I ain't put I ain't for playing games at all. Yeah, you know, a lot of people around my age are just more mature people who have been in life or been around the world a couple two, three times, they ain't for no they ain't for no foolishness.

SPEAKER_00:

I ain't for no foolishness. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

We ain't for no fool. We we are not cut from the same thing.

SPEAKER_00:

We're not that far in age.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah. I'm not your friend. I'm not your friend. If you know, and when you you know, if you if you approach me higher just black by say, hey, sir, you know, whatever it is, you expect the same.

SPEAKER_03:

Right.

SPEAKER_01:

I'm not hey, I'm not yo or none of that, okay? I'm not. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah. Sorry about that. I'm feeling it. It does. And and outside of your home, you make sure you use it as well. I don't want to see your pants and your butt hanging out your pants. Pull them pants up. And young ladies, have some respect for yourself. If a young man is trying to talk to you and get your attention and he's cussing, and his pants, his his underwear is showing, and what what is attractive about that? Have some standards for yourself as well.

SPEAKER_01:

Right. Have some standards for yourself, you know.

SPEAKER_00:

That's not okay.

SPEAKER_01:

It ain't cool, you know what I'm saying?

SPEAKER_00:

So do you want to see your mama's draws? Your daddy's draws. That's how we see, that's how we look at this mess with the with the butt hanging, the sagging. It reminds me of seeing somebody's mama's butt or daddy's butt. And if you don't want to see that, then you shouldn't be doing it either.

SPEAKER_01:

Right. Especially you talking about sagging and all this. You got holes in your draw. Yeah. And they spotty with with boo-boo saying, Dookie saying.

SPEAKER_03:

Okay, okay.

SPEAKER_01:

I'm just like, I'm so disappointed. I'm so disappointed.

SPEAKER_03:

We gotta do better.

SPEAKER_01:

We gotta do better. Like, shout out to the the young cats is doing doing their thing, you know, they're they're focused, you know, they're trying to find their way, you know, how losing manners, saying yes, ma'am, no ma'am or just yes and no and thank you. Yeah, that goes a long way, you know. But for you cats that think you can go out and say it whatever you want and whatever it is, I got a remedy for it. I'm gonna tell you right now. So we ain't going back to old school or you doing paddles and all that. However, you're gonna get checked real quick. Yeah, you're gonna get checked real quick, and we'll see who outlasts who. Okay. My arm can stretch out a lot further than yours.

SPEAKER_02:

Okay.

SPEAKER_00:

Clearly. Clearly. So I think moving forward, Matt, let's let's reset and go back to I can't. You can't.

SPEAKER_01:

I can't reset.

SPEAKER_00:

Okay. Speaking of this young lady and her child or her children who were attacked by these these kids, I hope that there is justice for her. I hope that she can remove herself from this environment, you know, for her children, get some counseling. And then I hope justice is served for her. I really do. I I think fair is fair, and at some point you have to be responsible for your actions. Whether you're in middle school, elementary, high school, outside of school, you there are consequences. So please be mindful. There's cameras everywhere, all the time. Everywhere, all the time.

SPEAKER_01:

Everywhere. And like back in the days where you had to kind of piece it together. Cameras are everywhere. People got cameras in their cars, their hands, around their neck, yeah, watches, uh, glasses. On pretty much every pole, there's cameras everywhere. Ring cameras. I mean, it's just cameras everywhere, you know. So it ain't like it used to be back in the days where people can try to get away. Like somebody got it on tape.

SPEAKER_00:

As they should.

SPEAKER_01:

Somebody got it on tape. And be alert, you know. Just like we was watching that. Remember the the football player that was coming out the dugout, and then the police officer, you know, it's like you have to be watchful.

SPEAKER_00:

It's a lot of tension in our country going on, you know, currently. And yeah, we can't have the microaggression, we can't have the disrespect. Like everyone should, as much as they can, be in their own lane, be in their own lane, be respectful, you know, and just move around the best way you can, but don't disrespect people and don't feel as if you're entitled to everything and everyone else is beneath you because there's always gonna be somebody that will challenge you on that.

SPEAKER_01:

Definitely, you know, I'm one of them, yeah. Yeah, so you know, so y'all pray for me too.

SPEAKER_00:

Okay, yeah, you do need some prayers when when praises go up, blessings come down.

SPEAKER_01:

I need, I need, you know, because I feel like feeling tensions are high.

SPEAKER_00:

This is the holiday season, and you know, you're it's usually around this time people get a little bit more festive and they're not as guarded, but you know, we we're again 45 days of shutdown, tension. A lot of things have been happening with a lot of people in a lot of places, so right.

SPEAKER_01:

I plugged up some lights the other day and they didn't even work. That's fine. It was a strand of like 100, only like about 17 of them worked. So I'm pissed. I ain't gonna check every last window. I just I tossed them. Yeah, actually, I ran them over.

SPEAKER_00:

Oh, you're a romantic.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, but I I didn't like that at all, you know. So prayers go up to that mom and the kid and then their family. Anybody affected by that in the community?

SPEAKER_00:

That's horrible. And I hope that the community rallies together and get these kids some help, right, and and put them wherever they need to get help, whether they have to be shipped somewhere else or or spanked. Worked working in some some rice fields or something, like spanked. Beat.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, they need to be spanked.

SPEAKER_00:

It's it's something's going on. And that's because that was a bold move for a group of kids with no consequence, no fear to do something like that to an adult. Like you never really hear something like that or say something like that.

SPEAKER_01:

So we hopefully we can we can get that. So on that note, tell us what you think. Tell us what you think. You know, what do you think about this? Here we're gonna we're gonna read we're gonna really come back to this.

SPEAKER_00:

We're gonna Yeah, as the story unfolds, we'll we'll come back and follow up with the with the tell us what you think though.

SPEAKER_01:

How can it how can it tell? How can it how do you think that's a good thing?

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, reach us at all in your biz via vzc25 at gmail.com. Give us your um input on what you think about this incident that happened to this mother and her child in Chicago. Tell us if you feel as if our comments were too strong. Like, do these kids need love and care and support, gentle care.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, we want to hear from you.

SPEAKER_00:

Or do you think they need that ass beat? Like, let us know. We want to hear from you. Let us know, and then next week maybe we'll read some of the comments, you know, and see what the what the um the medium is for the consensus. That's a good word. I like that. I was using a statistic word, but I like consensus.

SPEAKER_01:

We want to know if that ass needs to be beat or if they need gentle parenting, or they may need prayer, whatever you feel like they need or combination of the three.

SPEAKER_00:

I mean sometimes it takes a village. So sometimes you need to go to the village of ass whooping, sometimes you need to go to the village of prayer, and other times you need to go to the village of gentle parenting.

SPEAKER_03:

Right.

SPEAKER_00:

You know, because you may need different things at different times, and the village will make sure that you have it.

SPEAKER_01:

Everything's in the village.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, if you will allow that.

SPEAKER_01:

You know, everything's in the village, village people. Well, on that note, get your minds right. Holidays coming up.

SPEAKER_00:

Ho, ho, ho.

SPEAKER_01:

Get your mind right.

SPEAKER_00:

Them chitlins, defrost it. Y'all start soaking chitlins, exactly. Cooking that Giblet gravy.

SPEAKER_01:

Exactly. And if you can't make it and you ain't really good at crafty with it, go buy it.

SPEAKER_00:

Oh, one more thing I have to say. I know plays. I have a friend that bought some chitlins in the club.

SPEAKER_01:

No.

SPEAKER_00:

Yes. And they said it was good. I don't need chitlins, but it made me laugh when we were talking about. So it, but then I've also learned there's a new, maybe it's not new because I don't eat chitlins, but there's a new brand of chitlins, not the red bucket anymore. People have moved on to a fancier brand of chitlins. And so people are going out in masses to find these chitlins. Okay.

SPEAKER_01:

Well, if you eat chitlins, then you're gonna definitely eat these groceries.

SPEAKER_00:

Aunt Bessie's hand clean chitlins. And there's a group on Facebook. So look up Aunt Bessie's B-E-S-S-I-E apostrophe as hand clean. Okay, how do you apply for a job to how does one apply to hand clean chitlins? What is it called? A Chitlin engineer? Like what do what do you said?

SPEAKER_01:

Chitlin? Chitlin engineer. No, a chitlin engineer.

SPEAKER_00:

Chitlin engineer? Like what is a chitlin cleaner called?

SPEAKER_01:

I guess you gotta get some kind of something to kind of pump it out.

SPEAKER_00:

No, but how do you apply for how do you post a job for a chitlin cleaner? What do they I'm sure it's a it's it's a fancy word. And how do you go to training? Like, do you just have some buckets of chitlins and you go through training like they do, like for Chick-fil-A, you go to a train chitlin cleaning school and then you learn how to clean chitlins. I'm curious that and I want to know I want to know where the chitlins are being cleaned.

SPEAKER_01:

What's more important is I want to know how much they're getting paid to clean some let me google it real quick.

SPEAKER_00:

Clean some poop out of the intestines, pig intestines, and you know, pigs eat anything.

SPEAKER_01:

So you can never really get the smell out. I mean, could no, you can't. And so people say you can put them in some vinegar and some smell like potato, it's still gonna smell like boo-boo.

SPEAKER_00:

So why do people say if they use a washcloth and put mint? Let me say, if they use a washcloth to clean their butts and clean the inside of their butts that they butts smell good. It's the strange thing. I'm just no, I didn't.

SPEAKER_03:

No, you try to be funny.

SPEAKER_00:

Are you guilty?

SPEAKER_03:

You trying to be funny.

SPEAKER_00:

No, I'm just saying, so if you just said chinlins are still gonna be stink no matter how well you clean them, wouldn't it be the same thing about somebody's butt?

SPEAKER_01:

But you're not cleaning my intestines out, though.

SPEAKER_00:

It's the same thing as the lining to your butt.

SPEAKER_01:

Listen, you do you would always left. You would always left with that, no. But what I'm saying is if you eat them chiplins, even after you clean them, your breath's still gonna smell like a boom-boop.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Okay. And I'm I don't care what you put in them, I don't care if it's a new bucket of chitlins, it's still gonna smell like ass. That's all I got to say.

SPEAKER_00:

There's uh videos on YouTube on how to wash chitlins, how to prop what's the proper way to season and cook chitlins. What are y'all charging to clean and cook chitlins? My lady cleans them for five dollars a bucket. That's it, yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

So she knows she's cooking a lot.

SPEAKER_00:

She's been cleaning ours for years and never went up on the price. I don't know what she charges to cook them.

SPEAKER_01:

No. Anyway, y'all make sure y'all get your weight up, okay? Get your weight up. You know, make sure that you know what you're doing, you got all the right ingredients because we're gonna talk about we want to talk about no, but we want to talk about Thanksgiving menus.

SPEAKER_00:

Like everybody has different things that they they like to cook. You got the Caribbean, you got you know the royals, you have you know, different people in different groups that like to cook different things. So we want to talk about next time what is on your menu. We want to hear about them desserts too, or if you're gonna go out to eat.

SPEAKER_01:

Right.

SPEAKER_00:

Okay, we want to know get ready. We want to know.

SPEAKER_01:

And don't be lying.

SPEAKER_00:

And if you cooking chitless, let us know.

SPEAKER_01:

Exactly. And you can be anonymous, you know, like you say you want over some. Be proud.

SPEAKER_00:

Be proud. If you went to somebody's house and you can smell chitless outside before you got in the house.

SPEAKER_01:

Or they breakfast them like chitlits.