Village Vets
Cartersville natives. Real voices. Raw takes on sports, culture, and life. From the Falcons to hip-hop to hometown heat—unfiltered and for the people. Welcome to the Village Vets Podcast.
Village Vets
The Village Vets discuss Charlie Kirk, Atlanta rappers, and childhood memories
What makes someone an American hero, and who gets to decide? In this raw, unfiltered conversation, The Village Vets tackle the controversial public reactions to Charlie Kirk's death while examining the double standards in how society mourns different figures. The hosts don't hold back as they dissect why some celebrate while others condemn, revealing uncomfortable truths about America's racial divides and selective empathy.
Before diving into politics, the crew passionately debates Atlanta's hip-hop Mount Rushmore, with compelling cases made for overlooked legends like 2 Chainz and Ludacris alongside established icons Future, Gucci Mane, and André 3000. This cultural analysis extends to a nostalgic reflection on Atlanta's evolving club scene, where the hosts lament how bottle service and VIP sections have replaced the authentic, communal dance floor experience that once defined the city's nightlife.
The conversation takes personal turns as well, with hilarious stories from middle school basketball rivalries – from fighting over jersey numbers to throwing elbows during games – revealing how these formative experiences shaped their friendships and identities. These seemingly disparate topics weave together into a thought-provoking examination of how we value different voices, spaces, and lives in American culture.
Whether you're interested in music, politics, or just love authentic conversation that doesn't shy away from difficult subjects, this episode offers both entertainment and genuine perspective. Join us as we navigate the complex intersection of culture, community, and controversy with honesty and heart.
Yeah yeah, we got to keep your head up.
Speaker 4:This is where death will come and the light to the sun. The dark shall come. Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh oh oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, on the wild move.
Speaker 2:Don't respect me, don't respect me.
Speaker 3:Don't respect me, real fuck.
Speaker 2:Superstitious ass, niggas and bro.
Speaker 1:You a little yada, can eh I?
Speaker 2:spit on coats when they do coat. Why this dirty bitch speaking on dick should never suck again Just because your friends hit it? Don't think that y'all sister wise Alone Walking through New York with three throwing knives Outside, rarely do I hide. I just know my role. One bullet Send him to a dream. Feel like Jermaine Cole, my bitch. Stand in front of polls, but she ain't never voted your favorite rapper, rap voted your favorite rapper, rap out ak, but he ain't never told it. Holly rose, your favorite song she ain't never know it.
Speaker 1:Biggest bang I don't want to take yours because that's just too easy. Is that what you tell me once you get on top? You tell me that that ride, is that what you tell them when she get on top you tell them to let that ride. It's just coming like that. Ooh yeah, it's still like. Ah man, it's early in the show, I shouldn't be talking like that.
Speaker 4:Church folks might be listening. Can you hear this? Yeah, hey, yeah, we're going to get flagged, but I don't care.
Speaker 3:I need to be able to hear that that chain's.
Speaker 1:Yeah. Yeah, we're going to get flagged, but I don't care.
Speaker 3:I didn't even hear that that's Chains going acting like that. I think he's underrated too I always thought Chains was underrated. That's what I'm going to be like when he don't get his name mentioned in that Atlanta conversation.
Speaker 1:You know what? That's funny, because we was talking about the Schooley stuff earlier. But I feel the same way about Chains. I feel as a hit maker. He can do the trap stuff, he can do the club stuff.
Speaker 3:He can do everything.
Speaker 1:He got multiple flows. Chains make great music.
Speaker 3:Chains. He all around. He really deliver all the way around the board and he gonna give you that. He gonna give you the vibe you want. He gonna give you that fly vibe. He gonna give you that old nigga vibe. He gonna give you that I can be player vibe. I can give you that soft vibe. Chayne's going to give it to you Really. That's why I say him and Schooley, they really one of their own, like when we mention Atlanta, like those are two real Atlanteans that we got to start putting on that Mount Rushmore, just being real.
Speaker 1:I don't know if we put them on the Mount Rushmore, but I think we put them in a conversation.
Speaker 3:I feel like you got to Me personally because again, look at what.
Speaker 3:Chains done did For real. Look at what Chains done did. But then again, for us personally, look at what Schooley done did. Schooley ain't missed since we've been in fucking middle school. I mean he done really gave everybody the loop. He done gave everybody the loop on everything they need to do when it come to the rapping and singing school the first to do that when it come to bringing in the melodies and really actually rapping on songs instead of that mumbling man school, he was doing that. So again, like I say, it changed he doing that. So again, I don't know man, I don't know. I feel like we, we got to start putting them up there a little bit.
Speaker 1:I I just respectfully, you know, I also think is underrated and I think I don't think this myself personally but I think he could feel like he's in the conversation of just a top, just a high-end rapper, who Ludacris.
Speaker 1:Luda, I mean for sure Like because I don't think for other reasons than like chains and schooling Luda doesn't necessarily get the love that his catalog deserves. Because if you start looking at how many units he sold and then you look at his hit songs and then you actually listen to him rap especially when he ain't necessarily on one of his you know like you're talking about, like it's b-side stuff little chris can fucking rap.
Speaker 3:if you think about it, from 02 to like 08, 09, luda and ti was like the things of Atlanta, like they was the thing. So again I feel like Luda, he got his just do is just Luda he. He started getting that movie money when he started getting that fast interference money. Hey, that that fuck being in the studio all night when I can go do this and take six months off.
Speaker 1:And I done made about four years worth of checks, I agree with you, but I think he should be when we, when we're talking about the historical conversation. I think that he should be in the conversation a lot more, like people just don't really talk about ludicrous like that.
Speaker 3:But that's why I say I feel like he can't be. I feel like he can be if we saying for a certain era, but if we talking about like that goat conversation, it's tough to put him in there only because he gave us like he gave us six solid years where he didn't miss, but then, like I say, he done took 15-20 off. When that saga got started, when that whole Fast and the Furious, when it really started running, they started putting him and Tyrese in there heavy. I don't damn about all that, I ain't got to do no more disturbing the when that whole fast and the fear, when it really started running, they started putting him in Tyrese. Enough, hey man, I don't damn about all that. I don't want, I ain't got to do no more disturbing the peace. I ain't got to do nothing more, I get it.
Speaker 1:But I just think, well, I think about Jeezy. When the last time Jeezy made something you really wanted to hear.
Speaker 3:Jeezy just didn't ever leave.
Speaker 1:so that's the difference, oh so if Ludacris would have just stayed in and kept making duds, he gets to stay in the conversation.
Speaker 3:If he's making duds, no, but Jeezy didn't. We ain't gonna make it seem like Jeezy was making duds. He was what.
Speaker 1:The last Jeezy song you cared about was the Bankroll song.
Speaker 3:That's a lie, the last one. He had that one with him and neo that she said you know that was what that was in 2012 15 no, that was on tm 103, but I gotta leave you alone.
Speaker 1:I don't know. I think that was 15. I'm about to pull it up right now. Don't question me on my cheesy album discography. Talk to it.
Speaker 3:I don't know which one you talking. You talking about the Bank Row, the one with him and Joe.
Speaker 1:Boy, Joe Boy 95.
Speaker 3:That was like that's 17.
Speaker 1:Yeah, it hustles ambition. This is 10-103.
Speaker 3:So what year is that though?
Speaker 1:10-103 came out in 2011.
Speaker 3:Well, the album came out I'm talking about. When did he start pushing that, him and neo though?
Speaker 1:I mean I heard it when the album came out.
Speaker 3:I get that, but that ain't when everybody, or no, I ain't gonna say it went, when it got when it started getting on the radio and all that. That's when it went all the way and got some extra numbers. When it was on just the album, it wasn't moving like that I can't speak to that.
Speaker 1:I can only speak to when I get it. And all that with bankroll came out in 2016. So we going on 10 years since he's made anything we cared about, and it was five years in between the last two songs we cared about. Like Tim 103 has me eat on it, but I just think, because ludicrous doesn't rap, we forget about him. But he needs to be Respected and spoken about, just like the T eyes, the Jesus and so on, and so forth.
Speaker 3:I really don't think we talk about Jeezy like that for real, do we?
Speaker 1:I mean when I talk to people about top Atlanta artists Jeezy always comes up in the conversation.
Speaker 3:I mean I can say that I don't know. I mean I get it. You don't put Jeezy up though, mm-mm, because again respectfully'm, I kind of fell off after um, after the tm 103 but.
Speaker 3:I mean that's when I I fell off heavy, but even then is like I really ain't been going to. I wasn't even going too hard on that one when before, after the trap of that love, after all that whole saga, love of life, I wasn't going too hard on TM103. That's me personally. I still thought he had some good snappers on there. But I don't know, I don't know.
Speaker 1:I've listened to that album cover to cover, probably in the last couple months. It's a great album.
Speaker 3:So who your? I know we already done, talked about it before, but who is your? Mount Rushmore of Atlanta, um?
Speaker 1:I mean, I got future, I got Gucci, and that goes without saying for me. That's just based off. This is just your opinion. What I listen to, um, I'll throw three stacks in there, and I'm not doing it because everybody throws three stacks in there. I really like three stacks. I don't listen to them as much as I probably should, and then it will be cheesy, and that's just that's based on what I like to listen to rappers, I like to hear music. I like to hear. I'm not. I'm not a. I don't hate ti. I think ti makes good music, but I'm just not a ti fan.
Speaker 3:I get it and that's why I say I will put ti every day of the week over gz personally and I mean that's again, that's just an opinion base, but I probably listen to more amigos.
Speaker 1:I definitely listen more amigos and ti, but like, like I got a migo travis porter thing, like well, but but like, I like, like I really fuck with that. And you know, kind of talking about atlanta bringing the mixtape back, listening to this Jermaine Dupri album, listening to the Metro album and them, for one, bringing back the mixtape to the forefront. It's a regional mixtape, it's an Atlanta mixtape that everybody gets to hear on streaming platforms, but you're bringing all these artists back together. You're giving them top-end production, end production, and I just love it personally. Like, listen to that Jermaine Dupri album. Everybody talking about Ratlanta. What's Atlanta going to do? The street, hey, atlanta ain't Atlanta. Rap ain't just the streets, it's club music.
Speaker 1:Part of what some of you people came to Atlanta for was to get money and go to the club and party. You heard about Magic City, this Strip Club, that Mansion, this. What's the club? Everybody compound all of that. You know what I mean Hit the Waffle House after you go to compound. You've got to hit Waffle House after you go to compound, or you didn't go to compound, but anyway. So all of that different stuff, bro. We getting the party music back, because atlanta is really a party city and I wish, I really wish, the club promoters would get rid of some of these sections, bring the dance floor back so we can get that party vibe back. Man, I miss the party. Bop fuck going in there being cool the whole night. Fly away from everybody not sweating.
Speaker 3:Now go in there and have fun get in there and be sweating, mess up your white t-shirt.
Speaker 1:Now this stuff, what you leave without leave without it, bro, you, you gotta understand. Bro, when I started going to the club, I'm the type I'm gonna come in there. I might take my shirt off, you know, make the whole lose their breath for a little bit. Two bills shirt that hell tuck in the back of my jeans. Yeah and I'm here.
Speaker 3:Just in the wide open, yeah, like, are you going in the club already pre-drunk?
Speaker 1:When I was 19?.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 1:When I was 21?, when I was 25?, when I was 30?.
Speaker 3:When I was 33?
Speaker 1:When I was 37?.
Speaker 3:So you already working it early, getting them juices flowing good and early For them two beers. That's really for the show. Yeah, I get it, I get it.
Speaker 1:See, I'm the type of person who would like a section but don't necessarily need bottles because I'm not going to drink the whole bottle.
Speaker 3:No. But I'm saying, are you going to bring enough people for everybody to get tuned in? Well, it depends. That's the thing I always make sure I'm bringing. If I know I'm going to go have a cut up, I'm going to bring enough people to where we're going to finish every bottle and I want to bring enough drinkers to where they're going to keep drinking all night.
Speaker 1:I don't even give a damn, I just want to make sure we don't leave no bottles left behind when it's time to get up out of there. Well see, that becomes the problem when you bring the big drinkers.
Speaker 3:You keep getting bottles and then you're like you gotta finish them off.
Speaker 1:That's it, the thing I I wish rube was on. One time we went to the club it was just me and Rue sitting in the section Rolling Swiss sweets.
Speaker 3:We had like two bottles, and it's us Just y'all two.
Speaker 1:That's alright. And then we ran into some of our young guys I won't even say their name, I won't even tell you who it was and they was there and we was like, bro, some shit left over and y'all didn't have sex, just left. Yeah, we just went there to people watch, have a cup of drinks, smoke, swish sweets, and we left no, oh, that's dumb as hell, that damn.
Speaker 3:So no, I ain't giving them.
Speaker 1:I was staying there and got tuned in just just because I'm already here now bro, we was out, we was tuned in enough, we had our fun and we got all, just enough for a look.
Speaker 3:Look quick, get in and get out but you know that's me and rude.
Speaker 1:We'll just go sit in the club and just feel.
Speaker 3:No, I feel that I feel that anyway because I ain't getting the club getting up doing too much of that dance and shit and all that carrying on, either I gets in there, get my vibe rolling and get on up out of there.
Speaker 1:So that's your problem. You wasn't out here snapping and popping. I mean, no, I take that back. I take that back because I remember, at the front till one time, you and that big ass white team and them orthopedic shoes and check my footwork came on. What's the orthopedic shoes? You know them. Walmart shoes used to wear the straps, yeah, and you took one of them off and you, holding it up in the air, walking around with that dirty white sock all over the front, till flow, you're gonna put your shoe back on that sounds like some nasty shit.
Speaker 3:I probably would have did you wouldn't do nothing like that now. Definitely, I'm grown now. That's you, ain't you?
Speaker 1:ain't you see, you ain't you? Ain't freaky v no more. You ain't you? Just you really laid back and soft and not fun. You just want to be cool. You don't do none of the stuff. You don't even play beer pong, no more. You probably don't even drink beer Like. I don't think y'all understand, bro, we used to go to VJ House and smoke Swisher Sweets fresh out the pack and play beer pong. You know what I'm saying? Like that's how I got the nickname Freaky Porno Mouth, because we were smoking them, swisher Sweets, fresh out the pack. And I don't know if you've ever smoked a Swisher Sweet fresh out the pack for y'all listening. But sometimes that comes.
Speaker 3:You ain't never smoked nothing out the pack without me doing all that. No, you smoked that fresh out the pack. Well, no, we were smoking Swisher Sweets out the pack. No, we wasn't doing shit. Can you let me?
Speaker 1:just tell the lie Everybody know we wasn't smoking. No Swisher Sweets out no pack. Everybody know me and Rudy go to the club to smoke no Swisher.
Speaker 3:Sweets. Well, just make sure when you put my name in it, just make sure everybody who's listening knows that something else was in them.
Speaker 1:Swisher Sweets, that's all we need to hear them. Hey, you remember when we used to be on the Tropical Breeze Swisher Sweets.
Speaker 3:That's the blue one, or that?
Speaker 1:Yeah, that light blue.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I know exactly what you're talking about.
Speaker 1:You don't have to call it that something.
Speaker 3:I don't remember. I really honestly, I don't remember my Swisher days. I was always.
Speaker 1:I remember. I remember the Swisher days.
Speaker 3:I had grape Swisher sweet something, but other than that, I ain't doing too much carrying on. I ain't doing too much carrying on. I promise you God almighty, those were some awful times.
Speaker 1:No, they weren't.
Speaker 3:Yes, it was.
Speaker 1:Those were awful times. No, I ain't. The Swisher Sweet days wasn't the worst part of those days? The worst part of those days were the beginning, where it was mid, and then when you graduated from mid, but then everybody else hadn't graduated, so you don't always know what people are bringing.
Speaker 1:And you know that's back when nobody would even text about that stuff. You know what I'm saying. Hey, hey, no, don't check me about anything wrong with you, poli. Yeah, and so you don't know what they bring into the session, and then you, they roll it up. You ain't, you may not be paying attention, and you, oh, oh what was this? This ain't the one this, this, this smell like that shit you smell outside the cath quarters.
Speaker 3:This ain't that one I feel, that
Speaker 1:for sure, I feel that for sure, god almighty, I remember one of our friends went and got me like two cramps with me at one time and that's not what I wanted, because that was me in college. You know what I'm saying and you know, at that point in my life I I'm grown I ain't want nobody's mid, because where I was at it wasn't. It was mid there. I didn't know where it was. I came back with the mid, we had some y'all means over there and I smoked that shit.
Speaker 3:I smoked and I smoked that shit, I smoked.
Speaker 1:I smoked some of that. I said oh no, and I said y'all can have this, this y'all. They said you don't want no money for it.
Speaker 3:Nah, baby, I don't sell drugs.
Speaker 1:This for y'all y'all, keep this for y'all self you, oh you, let me have it, this a per se for y'all, and y'all know yeah, y'all know who y'all are and I still judge y'all through that lens and that's. I should allow y'all to grow up and mature. But I just remember being happy about getting a gram and a half of some free meat.
Speaker 3:Oh, my, that's awful time. Anyway, tell me something good. What's been going on? How was your week, man?
Speaker 1:Oh, my week was pretty good. I don't even remember I was super creative last week, man. I was just in my zone, in my element. You know what I mean Just manifesting and setting goals and coming up with my path. You know vision boards, all of that stuff. Just really trying to be the best version of myself, reinventing me and just going deep into my soul to find out who I am. How was your week, man?
Speaker 3:Such as what. What did you do then?
Speaker 1:Explain, since you did all that, explain what all that mean you know it's work on my creative team about different ideas and concepts that I want to build out in the future. Okay and uh, and trying to inspire some other people to really, you know, shed their light, that's all touche, touche, touche.
Speaker 3:I can dig it what about you, man? Man, my shit was chill dude. Friday we got Candice cleaning service. You know we're number one in the world. We're going to beat it until it's no more. You know what I'm saying you didn't go to Dalton.
Speaker 1:I was in Dalton.
Speaker 4:No.
Speaker 3:I didn't. I had to work all weekend. Like I said, I started Friday, didn't get done until Sunday morning, but fucking Friday trying to work to make sure I got most of my buildings done because, uh, georgia and Tennessee played and I knew after that it was going to be a good football Saturday and right after I knew it was going to be some good boxing going on. So I want to have all my ducks in a row, have everything done, but son, uh, my, I got kicked in the ass so hard Saturday and all my ducks in a row have everything done, but, son, I got kicked in the ass so hard Saturday and all my plans got shitted. I'll talk to you. Yeah, you had to be mad, huh. Yeah, it was awful Because, again, it's like you know, we love being dad, for sure, we love daddy BJ, but man, it's just certain times, like certain saturdays and certain sundays.
Speaker 3:Now, yeah, I need those days like that. Listen, I don't ask for much. I'm not even saying I can't. You know I can't do the days that I need, but it's like, though, saturday and sunday I got to have them days. I got that from one o'clock. Really this week I was lucky because we didn't play till eight o'clock yesterday 820. So you know I was able to get all my other stuff out of the way. But, man, if everything would have went how it went Saturday, running and working and not going to sleep until about 4 in the morning and having to be up at 730 so I could finish up with the building- Did you do some powder to keep you awake?
Speaker 3:No, I didn't do any powder. No, not my style, absolutely not. So, no, the only thing I did was I was running off fumes and shit by the time Saturday night got here. My boy got busy, won me a couple dollars and you know, that's it.
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah, you know I was laughing when we were on the phone just thinking about what it's like to have to do your dad responsibilities when there's something else that you'd rather be doing. And for people who don't have kids, don't come and judge parents for not wanting to be parents temporarily. Don't, please don't, because you've never been wanting to do something that you'd really enjoy and then have to deal with a cranky kid instead. Not only are you not doing what you want to enjoy, but you can't even do the regular stuff that you do because your kid is fussing, making you parent and it's like my god.
Speaker 3:I was just when I tell you, I was just in such a vibe though, like I was. I just knew I was finna, get active. I just knew I was gonna be able to be loud, screaming my dog swag. He just pulled up on me. So it was like me and him I done. Told him I'm like man, listen, shit, I'm gonna agree to pull up over there. We, finna, get everything together. Don't even worry about it. Kendall, grandmama or mama, somebody finna, come, I know I'm finna, have me some time wide open the way. It's just me, man.
Speaker 3:I didn't get rid of Kendall ass till, I think, 1.30, 2 o'clock, and that was her fault. I didn't get rid of her. She went to sleep and then that's. You know, you know. So now, here it is. Here we are. The fight over everything is over. But you know shit, here we are. How do you feel about the fight? It was what I knew. It was literally what I knew. I said that. I said I thought Canelo would. If anything, I thought Canelo was going to be on his pockets by the ninth round. I knew it wasn't going to be nothing early. I knew it was going to be a real dogfight. Canelo got one of the best chins. Personally, my opinion in history of boxing greatest fighter I have ever seen in my life, like and remind you I got to see Floyd Mayweather, I got to see Pacquiao, I got to see the Earl Spence, I got to see all these guys, but Crawford, top to bottom, is the person I'm building my fighter after.
Speaker 1:So you know, Max called him the GOAT. You know what I'm saying. Like during the fight, he's like you're a goat of this era and I ain't going to hold you. I didn't really care for that statement because how are you the goat of an era? You know what I'm saying? Like you either the goat Cause, like the thing about goat greatest of all time. So how can you be the greatest of all time of an era? That don't even make sense. Just say you're the best. Just say you're the best of this era. The goat.
Speaker 3:The goat is the one, but respectfully, I think he couldn't say that because floyd's still alive, then they both.
Speaker 1:They don't say it you, but you gotta, no, you don't. You can just say you're, you're, you're a great fighter of this era. You don't have to say you're the goat of this era. Everybody be saying, oh yeah, he's a goat, she's no, no, no, there's only one GOAT. Now, if you say he's the GOAT of his sport, she's the GOAT of her sport, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 3:But there's only one GOAT. You know what I'm saying, so I mean, but respectfully, 6'5", hop in real quick. Your mic is, let me ask you, new, and I know it's different weight classes as well, but I mean with Bud and Floyd, technically both undefeated, both the masters at every level of boxing, both with. Canelo, who do you?
Speaker 2:who is your?
Speaker 3:go out of the two. I'm back to you, lee. I'm ready to use Lee Out of Crawford and Mayweather.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I don't know, I don't know. They say Crawford ain't fought nobody.
Speaker 3:Whoop nigga, that's a thing. He's not been in the world long enough. That's what Canelo said. He ain't fought nobody. Well, you seen what he did to Canelo, did he?
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah, yeah, I know what he did to him. What?
Speaker 3:I'm telling you shit. Yeah, that's why I say it just be certain stuff what you think.
Speaker 1:I don't have a goat because I didn't start watching boxing until like 2012. Okay, and I enjoy big fights and going to watch big fights and watching good fights, but I'm not qualified to speak on who I think is the GOAT. I'll tell you this, though, watching that fight, I did have an appreciation for Floyd because, you know, I looked at Bud. He had a couple of, you know, little dark skins here though. Well, you watch Floyd after the fight, he going to the club after and he look fine, see, and I appreciate that, see.
Speaker 3:So what I say with Floyd he's a defensive specialist with that, like he, one of them, ones that ain't trying to get hit but he trying to sit in the paint a little bit, and that's the difference. Why I say is like but he don't mind taking punches and throwing shit back, cause is he don't mind taking punches and throwing it back, like yo that's insane.
Speaker 2:Like I'm sorry.
Speaker 1:He throwing shit and taking it back, boy, that's crazy. Buster wide open, I he throwing and taking it back, boy, that's crazy bust it wide open.
Speaker 3:I tell her, bring it back. But if, if with dog, though, like I said, just seeing him is just he's letting me know what he's doing when he get his ass. And uh, floyd wouldn't play with that young man, he wouldn't play with him. It's all cool, it's just floyd wouldn't play with him. You can test out a bunch of folks. You wouldn't test him, I promise you.
Speaker 1:I don't know if you can touch.
Speaker 3:Floyd. Who who Just chill, bro, because Canelo touched Floyd, so we're not going to do that. Canelo touched Floyd ass a couple times, but it's just now, I'm telling you, just certain folks touching you. You may not be able to stand up and do all like carrying on. You may be on your back pockets.
Speaker 1:You know the few times Floyd got hit. I mean, he was okay, he only lost his bearings once.
Speaker 3:He was also getting hit by no disrespect, little bitty Hispanics. You see this one, this Omaha buddy with the nappy beard and all that man, they said this dude got shot in the head. And you see, this one is Omaha buddy with the nappy more nappy beard. Now that man, they said he got shot in the head and drove his nymph to the hospital. Listen to me, for that's a whole different dog. No, that's a whole different dog. Rue, please, you Know, that's me personally saying oh, I don't know.
Speaker 1:I don't know, man, it may be on the counter.
Speaker 3:What y'all think about that UGA Tennessee game then, what's up with us?
Speaker 1:What's up with you, nigga?
Speaker 2:Shit.
Speaker 1:You get that white tee from the gas station, from the bodega. Don't touch my feet ever again.
Speaker 3:See, that's what he's talking about right there.
Speaker 1:I'm over here, trying to sit on the couch and he over here trying to play foot to me.
Speaker 3:I don't know why he even on this goddamn couch. Hell. That's why you know he ain't supposed to be on this couch and I'm trying to sit wide-legged.
Speaker 1:Well, if Dean or Sean— If Dean ain't here, shit. If I went to practice one day last week and one of the kids out there I ain't going to say who the kid was, he wasn't on the team but he was a teammate's brother, player's brother. He a little short, fat ass kid right and he go to then say Todd, you got my same build.
Speaker 3:I had a short, goopiest build. I'm saying you got my same bill.
Speaker 1:Sure, that's it, that's it, that's it. I ain't gonna talk about my friend like that. He ain't built like Carl Williams he built like Eric Cartman, that's one of the two.
Speaker 3:They cousins, that's it. They first cousins, shit. Hey, uh, no, rooster, what you think, man, you watch the game this week UGA and Tennessee? Yeah, I didn't watch that game. What you think, man, did you watch the game this week UGA and Tennessee? Nah, I didn't watch that game.
Speaker 2:What you mean? You didn't watch the best game on TV this week.
Speaker 1:I was moving around during the day. During that time you weren't moving around, you were sitting home on the couch. Mm-mm, I leave the house. You know you save money like that. That's real.
Speaker 3:What? Leaving the house? Yeah, you turn all the bills off. Wait, no, the fuck, you don't Say what.
Speaker 1:You know, when I leave the house I'll turn everything off.
Speaker 3:I get it, but you still going out spending money, even when you up. I'm just out there chilling man.
Speaker 1:So, hold on, so when you come back, I'll call you right back. All right, yeah, I ain't lie. He tell me We'll be on the phone. It'll be like it'll be just at a weird. I'll be like, hey, let me hit you right back. You're not gonna hit me right back. I don't know what came up B I get it bro.
Speaker 3:I swear I get it. I know that shit B. I mean he gonna try to. As soon as it happen, he gonna hit you back. It just may take a little bit longer. Sheep, what being the big ass is?
Speaker 1:I'll call him. I got that football practice that Mike Evans catch and pass it's 9 o'clock Home alone.
Speaker 3:I want to crack this one open real quick.
Speaker 1:Paging you, wishing you come over my place After a while. Y'all said it's 9 o'clock. Y'all said it's 9 o'clock, so you know. Jinguan 9 o'clock. Mike Evans just out there catching first downs like it ain't nothing. Well, you know, I draft him in fantasy every year, because he's I'm just the easiest first down. It's the easiest thousand yards, eight touchdowns you'll get every year. I can get 10. Don't get double digits. I told you I always keep it conservative, like a Republican.
Speaker 2:So they say Stingley the best DB right who.
Speaker 1:They say Stingley the best DB, right. No, they say Pat Sertain them the top two, right? I mean, yeah, but Pat Sertain, he got a defensive player of the year last year at Kona. Man Stingley can't do nothing with Mike Evans right now, true, true. I mean, not many people can, except for Marshawn Lattimore.
Speaker 2:They just be fighting.
Speaker 1:They just be getting kicked out the game. They getting kicked out the game B.
Speaker 3:Both of them Get here. That's why they didn't kick out the game, yeah, but that's really one of the best plans, though If Lattimore out that shit, I don't mind fighting and getting their best player out here. Them niggas have dogs on their defense. What the fuck are you doing? And you smile Nobody want to listen to this shit. And you sit over there smiling, you and me.
Speaker 1:Y'all like Willie Jimmy Wine, y'all listen to the same OG. I listen to Kool and the Gang.
Speaker 3:I listen to Stingy I mean, you probably do.
Speaker 1:You know you up there in New York you probably listen to KRS-One. Now, you know what I'm saying. The Fat Boys. You know what I'm saying. Big L, fat Boys. You know what I'm saying. Big L, fat Joe, big Korn. Can I ask you one question? Why didn't you name no rappers, like today? You always doing that. Why didn't you name no today rappers? So you be listening to Takashi, fabio, I give you Fabio. You gonna say Tekashi, man, tekashi just dropped some shit the other day. That shit slapped. I ain't even bullshitting you, I ain't gonna say that you probably look like Joey Badass, little A Boogie. Yeah, just because I say young rappers don't mean I don't know about the young rappers. I listen to you. I listen to Jay Crick. I don't listen about the young rappers. I listen to them. I listen to Jay Crick, I don't listen to him. Jay Crick, come on B, I'm with you. Who is he? Where he from, jay Crick, he from.
Speaker 1:Brooklyn. Well, you know, they don't let you in Brooklyn.
Speaker 2:I'm there every day. That ain't what I heard.
Speaker 1:JB, that ain't what I heard. Jb, that ain't what I heard. I was out there today on the block.
Speaker 3:I'm there every day, JB. That ain't what I heard.
Speaker 1:I heard you I was in. Brownsville today, where you can't go, but I can. Crazy as hell, I got people over there. I'd get an escort down there, motherfucker.
Speaker 3:Yeah, god almighty.
Speaker 1:I'm good in every hood baby.
Speaker 2:Yeah, you could do with me.
Speaker 1:Yeah, well, this nigga talking crazy, yeah, because you with me, yeah. Nigga, I'll walk around5,000 in my pocket. You ain't me. Oh yeah, you know I don't carry cash. I do. Nigga robbed me for cash. They be looking at $20. That's a good come up.
Speaker 3:I'm so broke, nigga robbed me. You just be practicing, you just be practicing.
Speaker 1:You know about that broke nigga rob me, you just be practicing.
Speaker 3:You just be practicing. He talking about yeah, what's this groove?
Speaker 1:fest, shit that's going on. Oh, it's a non-topic.
Speaker 3:It's tired out here that was so we need to get this big ass on the phone. We got two topics that he got to talk on At MacArthur Park you big dumb motherfucker, when he get shot at At.
Speaker 1:MacArthur Park. You call the dean MacArthur Park.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I'm going to call a little big old ass and I'm going to put him on the speaker so everybody can hear him.
Speaker 1:Oh, you should let me call him so he can actually go through the Bluetooth. He got all that new house over there with the new Wi-Fi, he can just hop on.
Speaker 3:Nasty, I got you on the live man. Log on, bring your ass on. You got two topics that you got to talk about god damn toy, all you gotta do is press the button. You only got two topics there. You can get right off bill, come on damn ac all right what I'm turning you down Was I yelling? Yeah.
Speaker 1:I couldn't hear it, man, my headphones fucked up. I don't give a damn. I mean, if you did, I wouldn't care. See what I'm saying. Come on, man, don't do that. I went too far. See how you do me. I thought you was cool man trying to take advantage of the substitute.
Speaker 3:Yeah man, kyle foster, kyle, foster. We can jump on that real quick. Oh, research post after the rapper t hood dies, did I?
Speaker 1:think you that much.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I've been through so much shit. I need a back rug.
Speaker 1:What the fuck?
Speaker 3:Let me see that Let me see that dog, that Kyle Foster.
Speaker 1:Oh, I don't know, oh, oh, oh, that's Kurt Foster, oh, kurt Frost.
Speaker 3:Oh the Frost. I said.
Speaker 1:Frost, did he shoot a nigga?
Speaker 3:Yeah.
Speaker 1:Kurt just shot a nigga son oh his son did.
Speaker 3:Well, they say he was beating up on his sister.
Speaker 1:That don't make it legal In Georgia. It do what's up Ty.
Speaker 4:How you doing, hey man.
Speaker 1:You know I'm chilling.
Speaker 3:I don't like how this nigga from Ohio, looking like he is in college. What's happening?
Speaker 1:Of the week. He went for two touchdowns on our ass. Yeah, he on both of my fantasy teams. What's the name of it? Jake Booper? That's a fucking name, man. Nah, that's a Booper, america Booper. Let's go. Mike Evans, let's get busy on these fuckboys. Never mind, he didn't catch it Inbounds. Why the fuck would? Why would you be for embugling?
Speaker 3:you seeing what he did on us? Because they're mike that he looked like he was a house state on us. I'm like ain't nobody guarding him. Man you talking about last week, right, this mother kenny just all through like white man.
Speaker 1:Oh god, did he? Did he actually just catch it though, like if it's a completion? Did he catch it dino?
Speaker 3:what's up, man? What y'all got doing?
Speaker 1:let me see that Summer Hill Blue Devil shirt.
Speaker 4:That's something my grandma wore yeah, yeah, yeah, that's a, that's a hey, let's see that necklace.
Speaker 3:What necklace Pull?
Speaker 1:your shirt down a little bit.
Speaker 2:I ain't got no necklace on.
Speaker 1:Who Me? I ain't talking to you, Adrian, I know you ain't got no jewelry. Nigga you a square you talking about Dino Dino you got no necklace?
Speaker 3:I ain't got no necklace on.
Speaker 2:I don't be right man, I'm gonna put my jewelry on.
Speaker 1:They ain't got no Nigga Dom. They ain't got no Blurry man.
Speaker 3:Hey, rude, nigga said he ain't got no money down there.
Speaker 2:I didn't say you ain't got no money.
Speaker 1:I said you ain't got no jewelry.
Speaker 3:Rude niggas ain't got no money there or nothing. I ain't got no cash.
Speaker 4:I got to call V to help get the club. That was a timeline.
Speaker 3:I'm stuck outside. Click in the mouse.
Speaker 1:VJ. What'd you say? Click in the mouse. Can y'all see the mouse? Uh-uh.
Speaker 3:No way. What you done did. Is it the same shit you been showing me every time? I say that, yeah, look what is it? His son got like 12 pairs of worn ones F1 ones sitting right there. He just this morning I had called him and I said this nigga, he put the Air Force onesie hat on and threw them right. The onesie hat on and just threw them in the fire. They done they don't want one. Sorry, one time 115, just to fuck you here put them over there. That's to the side.
Speaker 1:Why don't you just get you some panda dunks and wear them all the time until they get dirty Like the bottom of your feet?
Speaker 2:I all the time until they get dirty Like the bottom of your feet.
Speaker 3:I'm going to go get them too.
Speaker 4:I'm going to go get them now Nasty what it do.
Speaker 3:What the hell you got going on baby.
Speaker 1:I like that spot. I like the brown, you know the stained wood on the cabinet back there.
Speaker 3:Oh, you like that shit. I like that shit, I like that, I like that shit, yeah, yeah, moving on up. Moving on up. To a deluxe apartment in the same wood, that same wood on top. Hey, hey, hey, can you do?
Speaker 1:me a favor.
Speaker 4:Yeah.
Speaker 1:Can you like get up and do the George Jefferson dance from the Battle Up video.
Speaker 2:Oh, boy you might got cussed out.
Speaker 3:You might got cussed out. Hey man, let's bring it back. Though Can you break it down and tell me something good about the Groove Fest they're having this weekend?
Speaker 4:Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. We Black, Bart yeah, yeah, Black Bartow. We partnered with Northwest Jazz Society out of Rome and we had a little jazz and R&B Groove Fest. It was a good little turn up. Probably had about 250 folks out there, at least when I got out there, and yeah. So we partnered with, like, Marley Archer and Dakota Wiley all of them from Rome.
Speaker 4:So we're going to make that an annual event. So we'll be doing that every year. But the hiccup is the band. You know what I mean. We got to find a band that I believe a little bit more appealing and who stay to 10 o'clock. So they ain't going to shit on them.
Speaker 3:What time did that?
Speaker 4:I believe a little bit more appealing, and who stayed at 10 o'clock? Yeah, so the day they go. What time they did. They did a good job.
Speaker 1:It's just the fact they didn't say you they were supposed to stay to 10 o'clock did they get paid to stay until the clock.
Speaker 2:They got paid and packed up, so you know, we, I, but on on our end I like we didn't negotiate that.
Speaker 4:You know we, but on our end we didn't negotiate that. You know what I mean. That's something that we got to make sure happens next year.
Speaker 1:So y'all just told them to come, hang out as long as you want to and just pack it up.
Speaker 4:Nah, I wasn't at the table to get the band. You know what I mean. That's something that we'll be more involved in.
Speaker 1:Okay, so you're giving a diplomatic answer, not throwing your teammates under the bus. I like it. Yeah, I like it.
Speaker 4:Yeah, I mean it's nobody, because I'm pretty sure we all thought that they was going to stay at the 10 o'clock, considering you know the event. I mean, you had the vendors out there at 530,. Of course you could have done that, but considering that they were supposed to start at 7, and they started late, you know what I mean.
Speaker 1:They started late and left early. And man, look, if I were you, I would throw one of my teammates under the bus right now. I would blame somebody else for fucking this up.
Speaker 4:I don't have much to say. I would blame somebody else for fucking this up. I don't have much to say. I can't say anything. I wasn't there for the majority of the event. On top of that, that ain't going to do nothing. That's bad for morale.
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah. No, I would be trying to kill morale just to blame somebody else and cause controversy inside the building, because I love creating dumpster fires.
Speaker 4:Yeah, yeah, yeah, hey, trust me, I know, I know Me personally, I know.
Speaker 1:If I was in the organization, I would blame you.
Speaker 4:Well, blame me, I can take that. Nah, I'm joking, I'm joking, I know man yeah hell.
Speaker 2:But uh, great turnout we.
Speaker 4:but um, we got to. You know, keep the momentum going. Man carter's view got some other coming too. Let us know something. Who performing? Uh, the band's calling nah, nah, it's an organization. They're having a Halloween party at the Brewery. I want to say October 25th. We need to go support them. They black. Don't ask me the organization name because I forgot I'll make sure that?
Speaker 2:Oh, yeah, for sure, and I'll make sure that?
Speaker 4:Oh, yeah, for sure, I'll make sure we send that out to everybody that's watching. But yeah, A good little weekend for the Ville man. A good little weekend for the Ville.
Speaker 1:How about you book your podcast to host an event?
Speaker 2:damn it, I'll come back home for that, that's easy.
Speaker 4:I'll come back home for that. That's easy. That's easy. That's easy. We just need to sit down and figure out what we want to do.
Speaker 1:The next event y'all have on the square, let the Village Events host it. That's what we want to do, nigga.
Speaker 4:Say less, say less. The next event in the square is Black History Month. It's the Black History Parade, the biggest one. Let's put that out there right now. Let me say we.
Speaker 1:Don't get yourself in trouble. Go talk to your team, talk to your people.
Speaker 4:The thing is this Rarely do we have a host like an actual host. I find it fitting and I'm pretty sure they will too, that our local celebrity podcast hosts the event. You know what I mean? It's on the right, it's on the right, it's on the right. That'll do well for us and do well for Black Bartow, as we still try to fulfill the mission of bringing Black businesses, black ideas, black creators together.
Speaker 1:One last question about GrooveFest how much money y'all make?
Speaker 4:I don't know, and you need to stay out of our pockets. I'm telling you, I'm telling you.
Speaker 3:You need to stay out of our pockets. I'm playing that shit right now, man. Yeah, you need to stay out of our pocket. Yeah, you been playing 2K.
Speaker 4:I'm playing that shit right now. Man, I'm hooked. Boy, I did a body yesterday. I'm hooked. You know, I got they got to do something about this VC, though it's too much, Like I spent $145.
Speaker 3:You're going to spend that VC boy. They trying to tear your teeth out on that more of a. You gotta catch the baby.
Speaker 1:The game's fucked up now Nah they ain't playing. The VC cost too much money now. They ain't playing, bro. You know what about three years ago? We would just pay $50, and you could max out two. You know, you could damn well max out two niggas.
Speaker 4:Yeah, Nah dog.
Speaker 3:You got to spend that 50, about three, four times to get all the way.
Speaker 1:Yeah, but it just costs so much to make the dude good.
Speaker 2:Like they're taking all the VCs you know what I mean 10,000 VCs now For real, for real.
Speaker 4:Yeah, you can't even get fresh on it, no more.
Speaker 1:And that's the thing, bro, like if you're going to go to the park before you get super fired, you go to the park before you get super fired, you got to spend some VC that you really need to spend on your player, on some gear at the park, because you can't come out there in the brown tee, the sweatpants and the 2K generic.
Speaker 3:I think that's crazy though, because if they get the hoop, I think it's fucked up. They make you spend so much VC to get picked up and get put on the court.
Speaker 2:I'm talking about VC.
Speaker 3:You get out there and get the shoes, the book bag.
Speaker 1:I dropped on the circle last night. Them niggas jumped right off. I said damn bro.
Speaker 4:Hey, for real, ain't no getting it out the mud If you ain't an 85 and above and you line up them. Boys are not going to line up with you. You be there right there by yourself.
Speaker 3:It would be crazy, them little fuck niggas. They'll let you know they ain't playing with you.
Speaker 4:One of them niggas. They'll let you know they ain't playing with you.
Speaker 3:If you ain't fly, they'll slide right out the way.
Speaker 1:Here's what you do. Here's how you beat a lot of that stuff. You make a bid.
Speaker 4:That's true, I gotta do a point guard to start it off.
Speaker 1:You can go at every time. Todd likes to make centers. He likes to play with a big. My bad. That's crazy. What's up, Kenny? My bad. I said Todd likes to play with a big. I thought that was inappropriate.
Speaker 4:He said it again.
Speaker 1:You used to play with Kenny on the team he's going to get fucked up, he's going to get fucked up. I was going to say, being Now, I got to go to jail for eight crimes.
Speaker 2:I'm going to do the shit I want to do Nah crimes.
Speaker 1:Nah, we ain't gonna do that. I am cause you started oh, cause I started, I am how about you take accountability? For your actions and not gaslight me. I am cause. You started it. I said how about you take accountability for your actions and not gaslight me? I'm immature, so don't expect me to do that. Well, I don't like being gaslit. It triggers me. You yell at everybody every day. It'll be alright.
Speaker 4:I'm.
Speaker 1:Dante, you yell at everybody every day. It'll be alright.
Speaker 3:I don't yell at people but while we got you, let's keep it pushing on. Let's go ahead and go to that big one now pause.
Speaker 4:I'm on the whole time, why?
Speaker 3:me go calling so far don't fucking do that, you heard me, man, don't fucking do that, you heard me.
Speaker 4:Why Nico Collins so far D man? Hey, what's the goal to the game right now 14-10.
Speaker 1:But they about to score.
Speaker 3:Oh, they finna score right now. Yeah, they about to score. Dix is finna, go up.
Speaker 1:I forgot, they got Nick Chubb.
Speaker 3:You know why they ain't bringing him up. Yeah, they ain't seeing him ass in here, paul. That's crazy. You see that, new cucks, new titties.
Speaker 1:Hey, see me Before he gets to the next topic. What's wrong with your mans? Why does he think he could ask me why I didn't bring some of that ass in here, Like, like?
Speaker 3:You know what?
Speaker 1:I mean. I didn't bring some of the bottle ass. You want that little back end.
Speaker 3:He would have made him a good little cup and then bring the back end ass in.
Speaker 1:I brought him. I poured a heavy cup to pour in his cup. New cup for Kenny. Oh, now they ain't going to get up. It's his topic. Come on, what's?
Speaker 4:up Kenny.
Speaker 1:Look at those stains. Man that nigga living good, Living great.
Speaker 3:He got that stained wood on top. Crazy, what's up.
Speaker 2:It's ridiculous.
Speaker 1:You need to find that sound by the AC. Send it to me on YouTube and I'll cut it. I ain't got YouTube. I got to record it. Yeah, just send it to me and I can just dub it on here. You know what I'm saying? Like we used to dub tapes back in the day, hold on. Hold, on Hold on, I got to pour me a drink. Now I know I don't see what I'm thinking. What are you talking about? I know, good and well, y'all ain't gambling.
Speaker 3:Oh, oh oh, I didn't know y'all ain't back here gambling.
Speaker 1:Pack up yourself, everybody. Pack up yourself everybody. I didn't know y'all ain't back here gambling. Pack up your stuff, everybody. Pack up your stuff, everybody. Go in the jail, Pack up your stuff, pack up your stuff.
Speaker 3:Everybody Go in the jail. Come on Now. You better come on.
Speaker 2:You want to talk outside.
Speaker 1:Come on cool.
Speaker 3:Tell me something I want to hear. I'm taking everybody to jail. What are you talking about? Taking everybody to jail? What are you talking about? Yeah, you better tell me something.
Speaker 1:I want to hear he said look Blue, I'm going to bust you if you're going to give me some information.
Speaker 3:Listen, look, I'm going to bust you.
Speaker 1:I ain't busting your ass because you're a cuss.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I'm going to kick your ass. Then I'm going to kick your ass.
Speaker 2:Oh, kenny, we'd love to see that, we'd love to see that Shit.
Speaker 3:We'd love to see that Kenny Shit let's bring in here for Nasty.
Speaker 1:So you know, we got to talk about Charlie Kirk because everybody talks about Charlie Kirk. How did they do to call him Charlie Kirk? Hey, hey, hey, come on, man, that ain't funny. Yeah, lee Rue, you can't do that. I mean you can? It's America's first speech. I'm saying it's America. We've seen an execution on TV plenty of times, plenty, alright. So you know, people have their feelings and then people have their responses, and then people have feelings to the response of it. I kind of want to just put it out there and and we really, I mean I've talked to y'all about it a tad bit, but we kind of didn't talk about which direction we want to go with it on the show, and I think that's kind of the best way to do it. So I mean, people are up in arms, some people don't care, and some people are up in arms because they don't care about him. Charlie Kirk, american hero, assassinated last week while giving a speech. So what gives him the status? That he's assassinated? Because that's what they told us.
Speaker 3:Why the fuck did you say American?
Speaker 1:hero. He's being treated like an American hero. You know he got the vice president filling in on his show today he's getting these special honors. They flew the flag, the half mask for him. He's being treated like an American hero. So, whether or not I feel like he's an American hero or not, america, is treating him like a hero, so therefore he's an American hero Nah they don't think I hit the line, but, ness, go ahead, let's hear you.
Speaker 3:I want to hear you.
Speaker 4:I mean, it ain't my business, bro. Like I look at it, like this, I think America, you know his crowd, who he appealed to. Like I didn't know who Charlie Kirk was until the day he died. Right Me either.
Speaker 4:Dude, my introduction to Charlie Kirk was listening to him on TikTok talk about how the biggest issue in the black community is the absence of fathers he white, he white. And then you know, three hours later he was dead. But I gotta, I gotta believe that whatever he represented, it ain't for me and my beliefs and who I am and the people I deal with. Because it was about division, right, and y'all know I'm pro black as they come. So of course, I'm well aware of all the issues within the community.
Speaker 4:So, but what he was voicing a lot of times and, like I said, I only known about the man a week it was Faust and it was programming for the whole MAGA Trump rhetoric and what they try to push and pushing poison in the black community. So, like I said, I hate that kids ain't got their daddy no more. I hate that a wife ain't got a husband, but I don't have to feel no type of way. He wasn't no hero to me and just because he was a christian, don't make him no saint right. Everybody want to say that he don't.
Speaker 4:It don't. That's all I'd be trying to say, dean, that's it. Like he, he, he. He had an agenda he pushed, and so what was?
Speaker 1:this. So what was his push? I so I'll break it down to you. I did a little bit of research.
Speaker 2:What was he?
Speaker 1:I'm going to try to tell you so. He was a guy who grew up in the suburbs of Chicago to a well-to-do family, conservative family, you know, private school, that type deal, and he was a big fan of Rush Limbaugh. The stories go Racist, some would say that, but at the least he pushes information that could be perceived as racist by a lot of people. Is Rush Limbaugh the not-beheaded host? Nah, that's Don Imus.
Speaker 1:Oh, okay, not-beheaded host was funny, it may have been racist but that was funny, I know it was funny, but he can't say that, yeah, but so, like Rush Limbaugh, he's a conservative radio host, super popular, a big figure in the conservative movement. This kid was a huge fan of him when the Tea Party movement started. You know around Sarah Palin and those types after the 08 election he became a big fan.
Speaker 1:Hey, Nalen Palin Shout out to Lisa Ann types after the 08 election he became Nailing Palin Shout out to Lisa Ann. But anyways, he was a part of the Tea Party and he started working his way in the Tea Party as a teenager and those people in that movement, they liked him, they liked what he pushed and then they put funding behind him because he was involved in conservative politics. Then he ended up landing a job with Don Jr after the first Trump presidency and then found himself in the media place to no before the first Trump presidency because he was not a Trump guy at first Trump presidency. Because he was not a Trump guy at first. He was a Tea Party Republican values guy, conservative values guy and then got won over by Trump and then became a megaphone for the Trump administration. So that's kind of who he is in a nutshell.
Speaker 3:Anti-Gaza guy too. I was listening to Dean talk about that the got to.
Speaker 1:So he was pro-Israel. But what people are saying? You know, people like Candace Owens and shit right, I don't know because I don't follow his work at all. I ain't know that nigga till he die. Rip to him and his family Prayers for them, because, no matter how up we may think that this person is, you know what I mean like it's family, still look like people, still love it?
Speaker 2:why are we on this israel?
Speaker 1:well hey we're gonna stay away from, we're not gonna go too deep into that one.
Speaker 1:Okay, just they pissed me off today, but, but, but, but, yeah, yeah yeah, we can talk about that on the phone, okay, but but uh, they said he started shifting away from being pro-israel and was starting to push back on israel and some are pushing a narrative that's how he ended up losing his life, because he switched up again. That's a conspiracy. It's not backed in anything. I'm just speaking to the narratives around the guy, but I kind of want to focus this conversation on kind of the response to it. Right, so you have his fans, his supporters, mourning his death. I don't care about that, as they should.
Speaker 1:Fuck what he says, fuck what he stands for. If you're a fan of somebody, you should, you should mourn when they die, cool. Then you have the people who who hated him dude, because y'all don't, y'all don't rock with dude. But then you also have people celebrating his death and, although I can have my thoughts on on what he was doing with his life, at the same time I'm not gonna really I'm just not gonna celebrate anybody dying like period. That's just not me. Even if I'm, even if I, if, even if my life is better that they die, I'm not gonna celebrate it publicly, maybe privately, amongst my friends, but I'm not going to put that out there, because that's just who I am as a person.
Speaker 2:That's a hypocrite.
Speaker 1:You said you ain't going to celebrate it, but I'll do it privately. Yeah, I'm a hypocrite nigga, so what?
Speaker 3:Okay, you would still technically celebrate it.
Speaker 1:No, no, I'll never celebrate it.
Speaker 3:I'm not saying necessarily celebrate it, but I mean like you're not going to mourn you ain't going to watch a lady be sad.
Speaker 1:I don't give a fuck about Charlie Kirk at all. His life meant nothing to me personally. I didn't know he existed and because I didn't know he existed when he passed away, niggas die every day B you know what I'm saying. I tell people a lot of times. Bad shit happens. People lose their daddy, people lose their mama, people lose their auntie, people lose their uncle, people lose their kids. Death happens and we have to learn how to live with that. People lose their virginity too. If I don't know you when you pass away, I don't give a fuck that you died. It ain't fuck with you and what you stand for, because that's just not my place. I just want to have.
Speaker 1:I just think it's been crazy how divisive this conversation has been and I've seen and I've seen a file still haven't been released and I've seen files to have been released, released and Epstein files to have been released. But like everybody's going crazy about this guy that from most accounts with the people in my circles didn't know he existed and then those that I knew that I know who kind of follow that that never came up in conversation. Yeah, I don't think black people know who he was, except Candace Owen, but she's been a white man, so I don't care. I mean, you know so they don't care, she's kind of lying.
Speaker 1:I think go ahead, Rue. No, no, you're good. I'll say something bad.
Speaker 4:I think I'm with you, Lee. I don't want to celebrate nobody's death, but I also don't have to care right, but I also don't have to kill right, Because I can count on my hands in the past decade. How many times I don't watch a black person get killed on camera.
Speaker 1:Why you got to bring race into it, Dean. You always want to bring race into shit. That's what it's about. You got to be. That's what it's about, man.
Speaker 2:That's what it's actually about.
Speaker 4:I don't know what you want me to do. I don't know what you want me to do when.
Speaker 1:He's bringing race into it, because that's what it's about, kraken.
Speaker 4:But, but, but like.
Speaker 1:Oh, damn Like think about it. Have y'all seen the Drewski shit where he do the redneck shit?
Speaker 3:Yeah.
Speaker 1:Don't crack me really mad about that shit. Talk about some. If we would have did, it'd be bad. You got them right. It's gonna be bad.
Speaker 1:I feel Vaughn he even talked about he was going to dress up in blackface, but they don't. White people don't get it though, bro, cuz they ain't never been suppressed, you know what I mean. So they don't. They don't get it, so that I think that is the real conversation that comes here. Right, they don't get it.
Speaker 1:What white people don't understand is that when there are black people who lash out in these moments and they hear y'all talking about like how great this person was and how he didn't deserve to die and fuck you for hating this guy, it's like, bro, we got real heroes out here, people who actually weren't trying to divide and trying to bring people together, and they were killed for whatever reason they got killed for, whether it was a lone shooter, whether it was a government conspiracy, whether it was racist motherfuckers who wanted to stop the movement, that shit that we deal with, and in our community we expect like hey, hey, hey, don't be talking too much about them, folks, because you know what might happen. And then, when it happens to them, and then you have people talking shit, like I saw shit today about niggas that was Trayvon and right people laying out dead with like the star bird or skittles and shit right, that was a thing, right People talking about George Floyd saying he's not a martyr.
Speaker 1:He was on fentanyl. It don't matter what the fuck he was or what he did. A nigga put his fucking knee on his neck and killed it. That's fucked up, right. So when black people then say y'all want to get mad at us for saying fuck this motherfucker. But y'all been saying like systematically, y'all been saying fuck us since you went to Africa and goddamn 1619 and brought these niggas over here, and then y'all been saying fuck us every step of the way in this country we just say fuck you back one time and then y'all want to go. Oh my god, how dare you do this? This is un-American. We're going to start a war, dog.
Speaker 1:If we started a war every time we felt wronged by some racist shit, it wouldn't be nothing in this motherfucking country. But y'all motherfuckers, when some shit happened to y'all, y'all would have gotten y'all's motherfucking feelings and act like it's the end of the world. It's that caring shit, right? It's like that. You can't mind your fucking business when certain stuff is happening. Hey, I didn't want nobody to kill that motherfucker, but I don't care and I don't have to care. Niggas die all the time because of racism. Niggas get fucked up because of this fucked up system and we just act like this shit doesn't matter. But then when he die, oh God, we got to fly the flag to half mass.
Speaker 1:But don't make me proud, come and walk with me, hop in my shoes, learn what it's like to be a black man.
Speaker 4:Don't make me proud. I hear you, boy.
Speaker 1:Like I'm dealing with a white girl, right now she called me and she said yeah, you better answer when I call. Like hey, pj, I'm going to look the phone man. It was just an instant, like it was just a reaction. I had to call her back and say I'm sorry I lost you, but I really hugged the motherfucker.
Speaker 3:One dude. I'm like, all right, I got we went over everything.
Speaker 1:I'm going to go to my car right now. He said no, you're going to come back here.
Speaker 2:Right and I'm like okay, watch this in my head Like he think he don't know who he's fucking with. I'm with my car.
Speaker 1:I left and, bro, that's the thing. I remember watching this episode on the Joe Budden podcast, right and Mark Lamont Hill and Melissa Ford were going at it and she was like I feel like you're picking on me. And he goes do I pick on you more than I pick on this person? Do I pick on you more than I pick on that person? Do I pick on you more than that person? She kept saying no and he was like okay, so because I'm picking on you, why does it feel that like? Why do you feel like I'm picking on you? I'm talking shit?
Speaker 1:He said maybe it's because you're not used to this and now I'm treating you like everybody else and because you're privileged. So now you think you're being mistreated. You're not being mistreated, you're being true Like everybody else. That's what this shit is. Hey, what happened to him? I don't agree with. I don't because I'm just. I'm just anti-violence, but to act like this is abnormal. This is new, that he was just some special person that got fucked over, and this doesn't happen time in and time out. No, bro, now you're just being treated like everybody else. You're not being treated better than everybody else. So it's not mistreatment based on a societal standard. You are just being treated differently than you're used to. So you think you're being mistreated because you no longer are reaping the benefits that your privileges once granted you that pretty privilege shit ain't moving.
Speaker 4:And let me say this you know I have a hard time having religious conversations on this podcast. Why? Because y'all get a little crazy sometimes.
Speaker 3:Who, who get crazy? Chill, now Chill.
Speaker 1:It ain't. No, get crazy AC, get the yelling and y'all getting y'all feelings. I'm going to call it how it is what I tell y'all when y'all call me. Y'all feelings. It's as simple as that, you know. I'm gonna call it how it is and I call it. You know what I tell y'all when y'all call me, when y'all quit being some fucking babies.
Speaker 4:That's exactly what I said look, though, I think in America now it's like you got white Christians who love God and then you got white Christians who love God and then you got white Christians who love America. They go hand in hand. Ac.
Speaker 1:I mean then what you talking about. They go hand in hand. God and America you know that.
Speaker 4:You right, rue, you right, that's how it's based, but it's like a difference. So, even with the narrative of Charlie Kirk being a Christian, his values may have been Christian, but his actions didn't follow Christians are racist.
Speaker 1:That's why I hate when black people try to be that. That's my main thing. I'm going to send you an interview of a KK, of a clansman, me and vj washington and he said hey, we brought him over here. We taught him christ, like you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 3:We talked about to get dressed. We taught him christ, we taught him the spanish they want to treat us like that.
Speaker 1:That's what he was saying. But you know what he was saying similar things to some of what Kirk says, and and that becomes the problem. It's like you don't value who we are and what we are and you are telling a. You are giving a snapshot version of a of a deep, layered story, like when charlie kirk says one of the biggest problems in the black community is the lack of fathers. But what charlie kirk doesn't say is that there was the cocaine. There was a crack epidemic tied to the war on crime, and we have pretty good evidence that the United States government was involved in bringing cocaine over to America to then build that crack epidemic and then lock up people for crack Again. You get more time for crack than cocaine, but you can't have crack without having cocaine, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 1:Then you have the growth of welfare and social programs that allow black women to be quote unquote financially better off being independent, instead of dealing with this man who may not be able to produce a lot of money, so they can get enough money from the government and a place to live. And then it incentivizes black women to not necessarily have fathers in the house, because if both of y'all are on that paper, y'all can't afford the, y'all can't stay in a project, but you can't afford the apartment. You know what I'm saying. So I'd rather have a place for my kid by myself than not have shit with this motherfucker. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So then, so you get this and, like you, you understand why the black father doesn't exist.
Speaker 1:And then throw in women getting more rights, women going to college, women being able to get paid better rates, which they should. I'm not against that. But then you start having these career women who lead a nigga for cheating now, because he can't financially abuse her. So then you create other single black parent households, because what mama put up with, the daughter ain't putting up with, because she got some money. You know what I mean. So now you got all these things fighting against each other, which makes it make sense why the black man doesn't exist in the house. And then black women they don't remarry and get back together like white women do, and all that stuff. So you don't have these family units. And so then you have these kids who grow up without fathers and me and talk about it all the time in coaching. Hey, you can tell the kids who ain't got daddies Right and like sometimes you see the kid like dang bro, that boy needs a daddy, he got it, but God, you can tell he's being raised by his mama.
Speaker 1:Well, that's a small percentage that black niggas ain't got no father. I ain't going to say small, I'm trying to think the shaw, dean, dean. Well, no, a lot of niggas we play sports with they daddies with. My cousin. Now, if they dadded in the house they'd be around, you know what I mean?
Speaker 1:No, I'm talking about. Just start thinking about people on our basketball team. They didn't live in the house, it was just me and you AC. I'm talking about different grades in high school, even niggas who had stepdaddies, bro, because, like on the football team, we used to always make jokes about people who had they daddies. Like damn bro, you live with your daddy. Soft ass, nigga, I ain't never made that hurt nah, you was bruh, you was gone, nah, we ain't never go through that in Cardiff.
Speaker 3:Y'all was fucked up over there. I ain't never got picked on for having my daddy shut up, big man, but no, that's what I'm saying like that's what I would say.
Speaker 1:It's only my friends, only two. I know that we all just grew up with our mom. Everybody, all my other friends got both of they. You know what I'm saying. They still married.
Speaker 3:You know what I mean and I get what you saying, though too rude, but it's a little different, like I think for so, for example, it's like when you grow up with your daddy, your daddy in the house. But when you got a nigga like me, for example, like my daddy was in the house my whole life, but he was also one of the niggas that, like he was on his own schedule, he worked crazy out no that's the main thing you can think about like cause.
Speaker 1:If you were a woman, she not gonna know. I tell this on live, on everything but, vijay, you had him in the house, though it's there, but listen though.
Speaker 3:I hear that, but what I'm saying is, with my pop being in the house, I still didn't learn there. You know what I mean. But listen though. I hear that, but what I'm saying is, with my pop being in the house, I still didn't learn how to actually piss until I was like four or five for real Like standing up pissing and shit. I learned how to piss and white man and all that like a woman, like I was sitting down and I was doing all that little shit like the piss and shit.
Speaker 1:I get that, but you got them. You get what I'm saying, bj. Compared to a nigga girl with two women, it's like damn, like fuck. You know, you just don't like. You got a test, you got a man energy in the house and then you got, Now you gotta think when I get like 13, 14, I some bitches, it's like man, y'all can see me. You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 1:Because, natural instincts start kicking in. You know what I'm saying? No, but it's real and like, be what you want to say. Your mama acted a certain way because your daddy was in the house, right, dean? Your mama acted a certain way because your daddy was in the house, me and Ru living in a house with two other women and they ain't getting checked by no nigga. And then no respect to AC, ac, really, he ain't like me. That's all I'm going to say.
Speaker 3:No, no, no.
Speaker 1:I follow the rules. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2:He not like me.
Speaker 1:Hey Adrian, you Like I don't know, he's not like me. Like I'm going to you know what I mean. Hey, but Adrian, you can say that on here and I'm not offended by it. Yeah, yeah, that's what I'm saying.
Speaker 1:Like when I talk to you, I'll be like look here what I tell you, az, look here. It's going to keep going until you got to be a long way. They want to fuck you up. I'm sorry, frank, I remember one time, bro, it was probably the biggest fight me and my mama got into one day.
Speaker 1:I was 18. I wanted to come up here. Red was living up here. She told me I couldn't come. I'm like man, what the fuck you mean? I can't go. I'm on the main road, which I really went. You was right there. Right, I was down there, okay, which I wasn't coming here. I'll go on somewhere else. I'll just tell her I was going here so she will leave me alone. And she was just like no, and then we start arguing. I'm like why, like like, bro, I'm 18, I'm just going up the road and we get to arguing. Then she pick up the broom and that was like kind of the first, like I'll always give my mama that like respect. Oh, she can't hit me. But then she put the broom and I was like hit me Now, hit me with it. You don't pick up the broom, hit me with it.
Speaker 1:She was like the first time though, like my balls dropped, like I don't know.
Speaker 4:She does not fit.
Speaker 3:And anybody that's on this live is watch. Ask him about Erica Candy. When I told her to hit me with this motherfucker, how old was she? Like 14.
Speaker 3:No, no, see, see, see, so wait wait, I'm going to tell you, the first time was 14. Then when we moved to town no, no, I graduated in U Harleys, excuse me. So when I graduated, it was right before we graduated I got's in the back. No, I'm walking. I'm walking through the house because I didn't get in till like four o'clock in the morning. She I wasn't answering my phone, I wasn't doing none of that and she go over the back because I wasn't that's, that's different.
Speaker 1:I'm talking about we, we, we face to face and she picked up the broom and I'm saying hit me with it, because now you throwing it in my face I'm gonna catch that. Oh, no, because that's because, no, no, no, no. I'm bro, I'm 18, I'm lifting weights like I'm in shape, bro, like bro you're not. I'm not about to let nobody hit me with no broom. Yeah, and for anybody listening, my mom was not abusive. I only got hit with belts growing up and I didn't get crazy with it like that. It's just a situation where it's now that her like if I had a daddy in the house, the argument don't happen because, because my dad would just be like man, let that boy go, oh yeah, you know, as soon as you start doing all that rowling, then that he doesn't bust.
Speaker 3:Yeah, now I got a. What you say.
Speaker 1:Oh, yeah, for sure I'm with you, I'm with you, so like that, and that's one of the things. That's that when we talk about, when me and todd talk about kids not having daddies in their house, you just see how they deal with authority, male figures and being yelled at and being treated in an aggressive way. It's football, right? I meet these kids from football, so football is aggressive. Sometimes you're going to be intense and you just see the different way the kids respond.
Speaker 3:That's a fact, though. That's a fact though.
Speaker 1:That was some good shit. Man Really tapped into some shit.
Speaker 4:Yeah, hey, man, we ain't got to worry about nothing. That ain't our goddamn business.
Speaker 1:And I think to close out, oh boy, or Charlie Kirk, bro. I think that's the thing, bro, putting your opinion out there, cool, and this is on both sides. But, like just saying something on social media don't matter, it's, even having this conversation Doesn't matter. I hope somebody hears it and it means something to them. And like I talked to one of my partners who's a Charlie Kirk fan last, like yesterday, and like I talked to one of my partners who's a Charlie Kirk fan like yesterday and he kind of like explained to me why people in the conservative movement follow him and I listened to it and I go, okay, that makes sense. I can disagree with what he's pushing, so I wouldn't follow him.
Speaker 1:But if somebody appeals to like 80% of what you're into, even like the black people that we know who are into that, into that, I listen to them talk and, based on the information that they choose to receive and accept, it makes sense why they can get down with that, because some of the stuff he says does make sense. Don't get me wrong. Like he just he ain't, he ain't like a, a broken clock. A broken clock that's right twice a day. No, he's right about some stuff, but a lot, lot of the stuff. It lacks context. And bigger than him, the people that listen to him and I'm speaking specifically to conservative white people who don't actually try to feel what black people go through and understand that stuff they can believe that stuff because on paper a lot of it is very true but you're not given the context as to the why. You're not given the why, you're just given the what.
Speaker 3:So with what you're saying I million percent agree, because that's why I said what a lot of shit that Charlie said or, excuse me, what some shit Charlie said I didn't agree with. But then again, it was a lot of little shit that he said that I absolutely agree with to a certain extent.
Speaker 3:I mean we ain't got to go in detail on what it is, but it's certain shit that he said Like when you actually go back and you think about it, like certain conversations like was the Civil Rights Act, was it good or was it bad? He mostly said it was bad. But then when I listen and I say and I actually hear he mostly said it was bad. But then when I listen and I say and I actually hear why he said it was bad, a lot of that shit makes sense because if you think about it, he said one in every three families, one in every three family, was homeowners. He said that we had our own money system. We had our own banks. We had our own like our own money, like our own money system. We had our own banks. We had our own grocery stores. We had our own schools.
Speaker 3:We had our own I mean I, I get it, I get it, I get it, but then again that's what I'm saying. It's just like just listening to both ways. I hear you saying I definitely agree with that too, nazis. I don't think I'm changing that, but but it was just. If we go full-time, I guess without the Martin Luther Kings of the world, without him saying civil right was bad, nah, this and that, or trying to bring segregation together was that good or was that bad?
Speaker 1:I mean, I'm not saying that no, no, no. So let's talk about King's message, right? King was not pushing for full integration. King was pushing for opportunity. Like you can't tell me no, because I'm black, but I don't have to work, I don't have to shop here just because you're here. You know what I'm saying you, just like you can't say white only. That's what king was fighting for, and a lot of king's message and it comes with him passing it gets lost, because if you start looking at what king focused the end of his life on the last five years, I took a class on this shit back in in 2013, actually one of the best classes I had in college, but it was by, uh, uh, dr vincent harding, uh, a a friend of dr king.
Speaker 1:He taught the class and king was focused on helping poor people, not just black people, helping poor people and he was fighting against the Vietnam War, and that's what ultimately ended in King's death King trying to get black people to the table. That's not what got him killed. Because if you look at what happened once we started integration, then your black companies get bought out because they're smaller, because there's more white people who've been supporting these white businesses. Because of the economies of scale, they can charge lower prices, so you're just going to go there because it's cheaper anyways. That's what happened because of the Civil Rights Act. But that's not what King was totally fighting for. He wasn't fighting for integration, he was just fighting for anti-segregation.
Speaker 3:Anti-segregation, anti-segregation, yeah, I get it, I get it.
Speaker 4:I mean Kirk's messaging was that's the way he tried to frame things is what I got a problem with, Exactly Because it's manipulative, right so to even fix his mouth and say that black women I know he's named names, so Michelle Obama, somebody else, I can't think of the others, but they don't have the brain processing power.
Speaker 1:He talked about. Jessica Tange Brown.
Speaker 4:Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. But to say they ain't that the brain processing power? And they, michelle obama with the prince, they all got college degrees. They got they, they overly qualified, but to him he tried to diminish anybody black to a di higher in my eyes, from what I know and from what I learned, also to say that Clarence Thomas is a more important black figure than Martin Luther King. That ain't rooted in nothing but ideology.
Speaker 1:Go ahead. It's rooted in ideology. He only says that because Clarence Thomas, as the black man, is more aligned where he is, so he will speak to the significance of. Because Clarence Thomas, as the black man, is more aligned where he is, so he will speak to the significance of what Clarence Thomas did. And don't get me wrong Clarence Thomas is a significant figure in black history. I don't care if we agree with him. I don't care if he's pro-black, anti-black. Clarence Thomas matters in black history, but at the same time.
Speaker 1:He's the second black Supreme Court Justice. He's from Savannah Georgia.
Speaker 4:Who was the first?
Speaker 1:black Supreme Court Justice oh Thurgood Marshall.
Speaker 2:A nigga.
Speaker 1:Thurgood Marshall was a nigga, though. Yeah that's real talk. He played poker and smoked cigarettes Real talk.
Speaker 4:He was poker and smoked cigarettes.
Speaker 1:So and then I think then, as we close this, this Charlie Kirk topic out, but I think the biggest thing is is that black people are celebrating his death because black people felt like he was pushing for our death, and maybe not directly, but he, he did not. Not only did he not stand with us from from everything I've consumed, it seemed that he stood against us and push things that that that hurt us. So I understand the person who celebrates that and I need the people who don't agree with that to understand that if you feel like somebody is trying to take away your opportunities and take away your humanity and that thing no longer exists, and then he oh he gets killed so he can never hurt you again, that is a reason why people would celebrate, and as Americans, we celebrate other people's death, like when we killed Osama Bin Laden, we celebrated. When Saddam Hussein was killed, we celebrated Like we've celebrated the death of who we deemed evil.
Speaker 1:When somebody else celebrates somebody that they deem evil, don't be mad. If you're the same person who celebrates somebody else's death that you deem evil, just because you don't deem Charlie Kirk evil, you can be bothered by it, but understand, just understand, empathize something that he didn't like to do and I'm okay with him not empathizing, but empathize with the people who say this guy was against me and he was good at being against me and he was making things happen that stopped me from living my best life and having the opportunities that I can actually work hard for and earn and deserve, not some shit handed to me, shit that I earned, and you're questioning that and you're not even qualified to question that. I can understand the person who celebrates that.
Speaker 4:And I think America need to understand this as well. This is not a rare occurrence at all. So you know, we got a gun problem. This is not a rare occurrence at all. We got a gun problem we also. This is as common as anything else. It's just like fucking apple pie. It's a part of the fabric in America. Man, real hard, what the hell did you just say? Hey, you know it's like part of the american culture, like baseball like baseball, redneck.
Speaker 1:That's the american culture and you know that well, murder is american culture.
Speaker 4:You know what I mean.
Speaker 1:This is, this is when somebody got it like no american culture. If you do something, you know like if you if somebody, if somebody doing stuff you don't like, you go do something about it, you know whether they're chill them over.
Speaker 1:You know, blackball, whatever the it is, man died in america all the time and I I'm telling you, I lived in the middle east. It was crime scene tape on, uh, atlantic boulevard today I'm pretty sure, got dropped, bro. I thought when I lived in the middle east I didn't have to lock my door, ain't nobody ain't no guns america. America is a dangerous place besides a third world country, that's a little different, you know yeah, because in america we think we need our guns to stand against the government.
Speaker 1:But what americans don't realize is our guns that we get aren't big enough to ever stand against the government.
Speaker 1:We can only use them against each other and being like I'm not calling the government bad, because the government itself I don't think it's bad, but the people in the government and the power that they yield then becomes bad and that and that's why people think they need their guns to protect themselves against that. But I promise you, if the president says, hey, I'm going to deploy active duty military like not the National Guard that he's doing, not them bullshit ass niggas, but like the actual, real war fighters and he deploys them to a city to execute missions, hey, cletus, jimbo, them guns ain't going to do shit nigga.
Speaker 3:The weekend warriors can't come in and clean the shit up man, look here.
Speaker 1:Man, if you put the soldiers in here, they can clean you up from miles away there are some weekend warriors, yes, but as a whole, as somebody who worked with weekend warriors, I don't trust them niggas to write my name.
Speaker 3:That's more so what I'm saying.
Speaker 1:That's the reason why I'm making no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no no no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. The weekend warrior the reserves, the, the who, fake military that's what they call them, that's what they yeah you call them weekend.
Speaker 1:I heard that one yeah, they show one week in a month and two weeks out to someone they don't know what they do. I just, they never heard that yeah, and two weeks out in the summer, I know what they do, but I just ain't never heard that they want to tell you I've been here for 15 years and I go yeah, I've been here for 10, and I did it every day. Fuck you, shut up man.
Speaker 2:Well, ac is layers, because you see how you're talking about them but then you remember, you told me what the field niggas call you. What's the word? Oh post, yeah.
Speaker 1:Yeah. But see, and I tell them field niggas, hey, we get paid the same amount of money. I go home every night. You got to sleep in a fucking tent, yeah yeah, like when you go out to the field and you out in the field for a week you may be sleeping in a sleeping bag, or you may be sleeping in a tent, or you may get lucky and sleep in the hoochies.
Speaker 3:But you ain't going home getting in your bed, yeah, no, hey, you can't go get you a glass of this right here, oh no you're nuts think yeah, and that's for damn.
Speaker 1:Yeah, man and hate black people.
Speaker 4:Remember that women love us women love black people Remember that.
Speaker 1:Women love us. Women love black people. That's what I'm about to say. I don't care. All over the world, black people are hated all over the world, but there's nothing like the American nigga that's found all over the world. It's crazy.
Speaker 3:These white anarchists.
Speaker 1:Yeah, it's just something about the American nigga. I don't give a fuck. If it's a weak-ass American nigga, they still gonna take you Where's that last tone in here. All right, I'm going to get lit. Y'all want to talk a little football? Man Baker just pulled it out. Pause, new Kung Fu Kitty. Y'all want to talk about our Falcons having a defense last night? I mean, both of y'all got up at like 2 o'clock in the morning. How many times we got in the end zone yesterday? Just one.
Speaker 3:I was thinking like, bro, what's up with all these field goals?
Speaker 1:I mean-.
Speaker 4:Put that new kicker to the test. I don't like-.
Speaker 1:All those are down like damn. We got the new kicker. I wish we would have aired it out a little bit more, because michael pennix has a hose oh god, that was filthy dude.
Speaker 4:Now that might be the worst thing you ever said and I just wanted to swing the.
Speaker 1:I just want to sling the pill all over the field.
Speaker 2:You know, I mean I know I used to be able to throw a pinky in a quarter mile.
Speaker 1:Ah, you was a running back in a tight end oh, that was a movie.
Speaker 2:You start watching movies you want to do it.
Speaker 1:I know it was a movie what movie was all for I? Don't remember, uh, the public dynamite there you go. Okay, okay. Why didn't damn that wasn't? Why did I leave?
Speaker 3:that? Why didn't damn that wasn't? Why did I leave that? You probably wasn't practicing at all, not?
Speaker 1:in that year. But now, hey, you know, Rue played D-end and tight end.
Speaker 4:I remember Rue playing back in the day. No, in high school I played the X.
Speaker 1:Yeah, you did play X. It's crazy because I'll be practicing tight end, but as soon as we play JV, they say hey, you can go to the X, you know what's happening.
Speaker 2:Nah, yeah, yeah. I mean I tell you all the time you'd be a better football player than basketball player.
Speaker 1:Bro, quit saying that, it's 50%.
Speaker 3:Nah middle school.
Speaker 1:You see how they played with me when I got to high school. If they would have did their basketball with the cast.
Speaker 2:I would have been shut down that day.
Speaker 1:They would have pulled me out of there with cuffs, or you would have left like you did anyway I would have fell played, so I wouldn't be going to Philadelphia.
Speaker 1:You know what I'm saying? He left his friends behind and stuff to go to Centennial. Like I knew that coming Dean when I was playing basketball look, we started. They better not do that bullshit. Nah, you were supposed to play JV. You were a freshman. Shit, they were trying to get me to play JV and Avery. Nah, you were supposed to play JV as a freshman. Nah, I was supposed to play JV and Avery. You were supposed to play, you were supposed to play. You tell me, I was supposed to play JV in eighth grade. You were supposed to play.
Speaker 1:You were supposed to play Are you going to tell me I was supposed to go to play JV and sometimes at the high school, at the middle school, practice, I go up there and practice with him. Are you going to tell me, nah, you were supposed to play freshman with me and Tez and Red and Patrick and Sean. Who is Tez Henry Shepard? Oh, nah, one of the best athletes you've ever met, oh, yeah, for sure.
Speaker 3:Goddamn boy. Huh, I ain't never, and I swear ever. Since that little elbow in ninth grade I ain't never seen that boy again For sure. Oh my God, boy that's. I want to Boy. I tried to get at him so crazy so many times. It was like every time I would try and get at him it was like you have all the fucking Grasdale folks didn't be the teachers and shit coming.
Speaker 1:Oh no, bro, you know, like after that game.
Speaker 2:Are you talking about the nigga? Are you talking about Sean from Laos?
Speaker 1:Yeah, no, like so, Sean did some shit to Vijay. Vijay wanted to put hands on Sean after the game.
Speaker 2:You know, we freshmen oh man, there you go Ready to man the game over man you always don't make me shit a Vijay thing.
Speaker 1:I play fair, I always play fair. Why don't you get him during the game, he come through the lane. He doesn't want to.
Speaker 3:Let me show you, I'm not doing shit like Rue would do. No, I'm going to wait until after the game. All that good, tough shit. We can do all that after the game.
Speaker 2:Game over with me. Tate, you got to get it, but then again.
Speaker 3:Like I said, we already lost. Now too.
Speaker 1:Yeah, that's what it is. Nah, y'all lost, Remember Dale threw it up for me. I threw that dumbass shot Yep man I forgot who that was on Carterville that's the one that whooped it Like what, we going to do something after the game.
Speaker 3:I said man nigga sit on the bench. Damn. Who was that? Probably it was one thing about it. Now I'm about to say it was with Kaz or Carterville.
Speaker 4:It was against Carterville.
Speaker 3:Because I knew if I had my bro with me, if we better tell you everything, I only needed Charles Chilton with me, charles Chilton going to act the fool.
Speaker 1:Shout out to the Perk Guard man. That's my nigga yeah that's the. Perk, I ain't going to hold you that whole day after our game. Sean didn't want to be by himself. I want to do head what we told him. Listen no bullshit.
Speaker 3:I ain't never like one. I had a. What was it? Jj told me I had a contusion on my ribs and, like I said, I called a big, hard flipper. Then it was like one of them flippers with all them elbows where you can't it hit you in the rib. Then he called me right there. You know how y'all had the bleachers. That was on the floor. So now when he hit me in the real, now I done did a front flip over the what Big Dick used to sit right there in that little front spot. Man, I done hit that goddamn ground all hard. Yeah, from that point I was like you know what, fuck it, I'm finna get kicked out the game. Yeah, jj, didn't let me come back in the game. The rest of the second half.
Speaker 1:Yeah, he come across the middle. You're supposed to give him one of them, draymond Green.
Speaker 3:JJ kept me out the game the whole second half. Who? I don't forget that JJ, jj Chapp.
Speaker 4:He was like my grade coach For real. Why the fuck I ain't?
Speaker 1:never know that Because you wasn't at the gym.
Speaker 1:yet I thought the football coach was the basketball coach, the eighth grade football coach. Wasn't he the basketball coach in high school? Coach Porter, no, he's not. No, he's not. No, he's not. No, he's not. No, he's not. No, he's not. No, he's not. No, he's not Coach Porter. Coach Porter did coach man. He coached high school man. He coached Tyler though. Yeah, no, he probably coached Tyler. He was scoring too much, and so I punched him in his back. Yeah, it's his grade, I punched him in his back.
Speaker 4:Yeah.
Speaker 1:Didn't nobody catch it, bro? I was on the top of that two three zone. He got to the middle of that zone. I punched the shit out of him. I'm trying to remember sixth grade basketball. Damn, my father's favorite sixth grade basketball was against Calhoun. He put me in and called a timeout and took me out.
Speaker 4:Damn, damn, damn.
Speaker 1:Oh man, let's bring it in Another funny basketball story from sixth grade. He didn't get his number. He was ready to fight over it. Yeah, what happened with Ruth?
Speaker 2:What number you going for?
Speaker 1:Ruth Nigga. No, I'm coming in with the 1-5. I've been 1-5 since I played with Mellie, so we were this big Y'all niggas going to take the judge. Who took it? Melvin D-Ray Curtis. He was 1-5 in the county football and basketball. It wasn't Melvin that took that number, I think it was. Melvin Nah Mook, wore 22. Deontay wore 15.
Speaker 2:And he didn't play.
Speaker 1:Deontay didn't get in the game not one time. Every game he get mad. Nah, but Deontay didn't get to play.
Speaker 3:I'm going to give a damn Rue rule underclassman bro, he was on the class.
Speaker 1:What that guy doing anything. You don't get to come here picking your number unless you know. No, I, I gotta go off. I gotta go off with her.
Speaker 4:How good a is that's how I need to go.
Speaker 3:That's why I? Thought he'd go off dude, don't go like that. Was older than me, but he knew not to take 15.
Speaker 1:Andrew Kennedy was older than me, but he knew not to take 15. Now he was 55. Exactly. I'll tell you another funny story Him and Chris White about got to fighting over some shorts one time. Right, because we had three pair 38s, right? So Trev.
Speaker 3:Rue and Chris White were supposed to get the 38s. I had the 38s. Oh, you wanted some long men.
Speaker 1:You ain't no nigga wearing a long shorts back then. It's ridiculous, it's obvious. What's being done out here, it's on a nightly basis. I hope the world can see now what's really going on out here.
Speaker 2:It's getting ridiculous, it's really ridiculous.
Speaker 1:Yes, man, this is ridiculous, man Ridiculous.
Speaker 2:But yeah, but nah, man, nigga I came in late and.
Speaker 1:I'm like damn where my shorts at why I got these little ass shorts. They both grab them and they ready to fight over shorts. I said what you do? You just set them.
Speaker 2:Nigga, I played my 38s.
Speaker 3:Nigga fuck you. Who ended up getting the 38s?
Speaker 2:I walked out with them.
Speaker 3:shorts on, that's all I'm going to say yeah, now Chris had to wear the 36s man man man, what else y'all want to talk about?
Speaker 2:You know he didn't like me the whole season.
Speaker 1:Chris Ago whooped your ass. I'm like, let him try, jay. I mean he took your girl from you, so I understood why that was beef ain't. Nobody ever took nothing from me. Hey, didn't he have like a?
Speaker 2:little whoa he had so many haircuts didn't he?
Speaker 4:I don't remember Chris White.
Speaker 1:I just knew Trevor used to slap his shit all the time in practice pause, yeah, yeah, yeah, now I know Chris white, go for a layup trail sitting that did y'all?
Speaker 4:did y'all make it uh down there saturday?
Speaker 1:what the groove fest no no the birthday party to the twin birthday party nah, I was in my, my 20-hour class all weekend.
Speaker 4:Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1:I wasn't doing shit.
Speaker 2:Y'all went down there.
Speaker 4:I ain't making it.
Speaker 3:Nigga seen what I had going on Saturday man.
Speaker 2:Legit wasn't letting nothing go on, you're supposed to take her to the party.
Speaker 3:Well, shit, if I would have thought about it. I didn't even think. I just told AC I didn't think about the party when trail he reminded me early in the week but didn't hit me back and let me know that going on a fuck around forgot about it, y'all, some bad friends. Give me a reminder for when you start the baby shower saturday right what time oh, everything is saturday where is it friday?
Speaker 4:who?
Speaker 1:uh, did you lock down the caterer?
Speaker 4:yeah, y'all registered with target uh, no, but I'll send it to you though. Children's palace baby, it's baby list, or something.
Speaker 1:I ain't got no job, so I'm giving you hand-me-downs, hey.
Speaker 4:I'm cool with everything man understand.
Speaker 1:I ain't saying no to nothing. Uh, uh, um. What's? What's the theme of the party? So we make sure we dress appropriately. Kentucky Derby man. What the hell I'm going to let it go. That's your theme. Is that for you or the baby?
Speaker 4:It's for me.
Speaker 1:You're going to have a ticket right now it's for the baby's mama and he's saying it's for him because that's the right thing for him to say.
Speaker 3:Kentucky Derby. I believe that. I believe Drew ain't giving a damn about none of that. That's nasty that I'm playing this Kentucky Derby.
Speaker 4:That was definitely not.
Speaker 3:Oh he going to miss these shit, man?
Speaker 4:That's my idea.
Speaker 3:I know.
Speaker 1:So what's he going to have?
Speaker 4:So what's he going to? How are you going to decorate it?
Speaker 1:You going to be on the horse.
Speaker 4:I'll do all that, but I want to smoke cigars and drink bourbon. That's why I'm about to tell you you're going to drink a little bourbon.
Speaker 1:Yeah, you know, the Kentucky Derby is a fly event, so you know what I mean.
Speaker 4:Come on now.
Speaker 1:I'm going to put on some country shit. You don't do that at a Kentucky Derby. Yeah, you do. It's Kentucky Derby themed, it's just country. Yeah, it's Kentucky Derby, it's just country. What they do Walk barefooted after the race Nah, you can do that.
Speaker 4:I don't know nothing about that.
Speaker 2:That's tradition. You don't know what you're talking about.
Speaker 4:You're getting in a situation you don't know about. I don't walk around nowhere barefoot.
Speaker 2:That's what they do.
Speaker 1:That's what they do.
Speaker 3:That's crazy.
Speaker 4:See, that's where you go with country, that's where you go with country, country, got you crazy yeah.
Speaker 1:Yeah, you talking about. Y'all know, nick Cannon said he had his 12 kids because of trauma. Because of trauma, nah, he had his 12 kids because of trauma.
Speaker 3:Because of trauma.
Speaker 2:Nah, he had 12 kids because he was horny. Like why niggas just don't speak the truth man?
Speaker 3:I mean, but even then, ain't no trauma, ain't no horny, ain't none of that gonna make me say 12 kids, or make me go say I'm 12, kids yeah. You gotta work to have 12 kids. Hell, I see what it is with one and two. They kicking my goddamn TV and man picture. You had an extra four, five and six. Man, come on.
Speaker 1:Yeah, nah, he said like with the divorce from Mariah and all of that stuff, the trauma that he just couldn't really like, I mean his narcissistic personality, shit. He just had them kids.
Speaker 3:Nick Cannon nigga Just a million young niggas. Got a whole bunch of money, got a whole bunch of new chicks in every different area. He knocking them down. He ain't got to start all that kid. He ain't had no trauma, shit. If anything, his trauma should have came from Nickelodeon, from all them freak stories I be hearing out of that motherfucker Niggas always getting took by that little fat white boy that wanna touch on him and make him, massage him and shit. No, hell, no. So if Nick ain't got no trauma from that, mariah Carey ain't gonna make me thank you. That's real trauma. To make you just keep making the knocking out of these goddamn folks up and making them pregnant, no, hell, no.
Speaker 1:You think he did that to get pussy? Who Nick Hell?
Speaker 3:no, nick Nick going to get it regardless. Bro Nick was going to get it regardless he one of the ones man, Could he get you? Nobody can get me. I ain't even that easy. Like I said, you got to work for the beat, but it's like you got to work for the beat, like.
Speaker 1:So if Nick work hard enough he can get you. I don't know.
Speaker 3:I told you I ain't, I ain't easy, but if Nick touch me I wouldn't mind. If Nick touch me I'll make sure it's recorded. I sue the god damn shoes of Nick. Big freak ass want to do something to me Shit. I don't know why he want to do nothing to old me Bezel Shit. But no, I think that's all we got for today. Hell, I'm ready. On them easy.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I'm ready to watch football. Eat me some ribs and go home.
Speaker 3:You always got ribs in there and they don't offer nothing. I don't like that shit.
Speaker 1:He cooked about 10 pieces of fish in front of me and just ate it. He was asleep. I told him I was making some more man that nigga ate it in front of me. I ain't gonna talk.
Speaker 4:You got busy on the grill one weekend when he fries or grills man that nigga ate it in front of me.
Speaker 3:I ain't going to talk because he didn't. He made the glory. I ain't talking to the diamonds VJ. He got busy on the grill one weekend when he fries or grilled some fish over here. I ain't going to play on his top, Paul. He end up. He cut us in, he cut us for sure.
Speaker 1:I did eat all the fish for Rue and I was wrong for that. But I told him I would make some more. Give me five minutes.
Speaker 2:He said I'm sorry, I was hungry. I'm sorry I was hungry, damn.
Speaker 3:You know how that be hell.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I just kept eating he did all that.
Speaker 3:He did that. I just kept eating and eating.
Speaker 1:He drunk all the liquor. I'm like, damn, I didn't drink all the liquor.
Speaker 3:You left that bottle of 1942 and you was gone. That's what, yeah, I done. Told him that is over with. I came back. Damn larue, you shouldn't have left. You shouldn't have left without us knocking this bottle out. You should have rolled him over it's not the mobile guy. Before you went to the airport and we and we split the bottle, so they even like oh yeah bro, like you know, he just gave.
Speaker 2:He gave me out my money. That's awesome. You, how I feel. You ganked me.
Speaker 1:But he bought the whole bottle and I just drunk the shit. You know what happens is sometimes you be drunk. I bought half the bottle and you drunk the whole bottle. I didn't say that. Well, yeah, because sometimes you be drunk and you ain't got no liquor in the house and you want to keep drinking.
Speaker 2:Man he told me. He said I have some other liquor but I just like that 1942.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I like that 1942. The way it go down a lot easier than this hot shit I got.
Speaker 1:You know what? I hate his memory because he be remembering shit.
Speaker 3:I don't remember, he remember it to the T too, why you remember that there ain't no point in me drinking this shit, the cheap shit. I got two weeks and the gang gonna be back. I told you. I told you, I pay attention.
Speaker 2:That's why I'm from here.
Speaker 1:Yeah, see, I don't be paying attention. That's your problem, fuck you. How about that? That's your problem, nigga.
Speaker 2:You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 3:I get it. Alright, I'm gone.
Speaker 2:You know, I don't get offended you know.
Speaker 1:If it ain't about, all right, I'm gone. You know, I don't get offended, you know, hey, adrian.
Speaker 2:If it ain't about the weed, I really don't give a fuck.
Speaker 1:so hey Adrian, my friend, I love you.
Speaker 2:I hate you. How about that?
Speaker 1:Hey, Dino, my friend, I love you.
Speaker 4:Love you.
Speaker 1:Hey V, my friend, I love you. Love you, man, I hate you. Hey, you know, cam Newton, he do one finger, one pinky, one pinky, one toe. How you gonna take that from the Migos? I don't like that man, you know. That's enough.
Speaker 3:You should have heard what Munchie B said. Munchie B said he took it from us. Fuck nigga, that's the Inglewood family right there. That's what Munchie B said.
Speaker 2:He took it from us. That's the Inglewood family right there.
Speaker 3:That's what Munchie said.
Speaker 1:The money TI saw he wasn't fucking with it either. Yeah.
Speaker 3:I'm just telling you now One finger, one thumb, one pinky, one love.
Speaker 1:That boy shouldn't do no more. Then you fucking with Jensey. You think he nice who?
Speaker 4:Oh, did you not see that running just be it.
Speaker 3:Did you not just see the running? Just be it, I just turned the game on.
Speaker 4:I just turned the game on. I'm in the boat. I'm going to cut the game on after this, though All right guys, I think we're done here.
Speaker 1:May call y'all, may not? This was fun.
Speaker 3:Village Vets. We're out of here. We're out of here.