60PlusThePodcast
A podcast where we dive into conversations that remind us of who we are as human beings This isn't about what the guests do as a job, career, ability or skill set. its about what MAKES THEM HUMAN
60PlusThePodcast
If I Smack You, The Atoms Did It | Episode 6 | 60plusthepodcast
Oh no, a random fact. They say you're never really touching anything. What? Like you're never really like touching anything down to like the atoms in your fingers. Always a s like some type of separation.
SPEAKER_02:And the I could believe that.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah. That makes sense, actually. Yeah. Like if you look like Don't quote me on it. I just heard it somewhere.
SPEAKER_02:That sounds that that sounds like it makes sense, though.
SPEAKER_00:Like they say, like you're never really like like actually touching anything. Yeah. Yeah. It's always like a space. What am I feeling? That's that's what I said too, but the way they explained it, I was just like, it kind of makes sense.
SPEAKER_02:Because it goes, it's getting down to like microscopic. Yeah, you gotta do that's what they mean. Like microscopic wise, you're technically not touching anything, even though you can feel it. Yeah, technically, you're not touching anything.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah, this is gonna be a clip, and we'll figure out what people gotta say.
SPEAKER_00:We gotta fact check it. This is fact-checking. You know what? Yeah, let's touch that check. You can fact check it. But how would you even ask that question? Can you touch stuff?
SPEAKER_02:Like, are we do we really touch things or we even feel yeah? We actually feel actually touch things. Okay, let's see what they say. Do we actually feel touch? Touch is the process by which specialized neurons sense tactical information from the skin and other organs and convey this information to the brain, which is perceived as sensations such as pressure, temperature, vibration, and pain.
SPEAKER_00:So, yeah, they're wrong. Yeah. They might be wrong, but they might be on us. Oh, here we go.
SPEAKER_02:Why physics say you can never actually touch it? If you're reading this, blah blah blah blah blah blah. We're gonna do some quick speed reading. All right, ultimately, it may seem that the atomic world is particularly relevant to our day-to-day lives. However, this info is a key point when it comes to our understanding, after all, blah, blah, blah. The real world, the particles. Here we go.
SPEAKER_00:See, it was down to the particles. That's what I meant.
SPEAKER_02:To understand why you can never touch anything, you need to understand how electrons function. And before you can understand that, you need to know basic information about the structure of atoms. All right. He's right. I'm not reading off. Yeah, yeah. See, I knew I was right, bro. You see? I knew I was right. I knew I was right. You do not touch anything. Yes. Yes. So it's down to the particles. Yes. Is that it goes that. Yeah. Yeah, that's too much. So yeah. That's our random fact of the day.
SPEAKER_01:I don't know if I wanted to know that.
SPEAKER_00:You see, look, now you're touching your MacBook, like I'm not really touching. I'm not touching it. So if you smack somebody, you don't really smack them. Yeah, don't really smack them. It's not really an assault. So I wonder if you are in court or bring that up.
SPEAKER_02:And you bring this up that technically I can't touch them. According to science. This was just the force of wind that did this. It wasn't me, it was the Adam. It wasn't me. I never touched them. I technically never touched them. I technically hit you with particles, bro. Yep. You're gonna be a lawyer. I'm gonna be a lawyer. I defend mad people with particle reasoning.
SPEAKER_01:I I technically hit you with particles.
SPEAKER_02:Yep.
SPEAKER_01:That's episode's name.
SPEAKER_02:There you go. I like that.
SPEAKER_01:I like that.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, we can we can stick with that. That's our fact of the day.
SPEAKER_01:Alright, so we got the fact of the day, and then I am gonna do the 50 years ago today.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah.
SPEAKER_01:Um, I will actually do this one. The first personal computers were apparent in 1975. Systems like Altar, Altai, A-L-T-A-I-R. Altair. Altair 8800 introduced the idea of computers for individuals, not corporations. So PCs were emerging 50 years ago. Um, I'll do a couple more. Cable television was slowly coming in 50 years ago. Sound about right.
SPEAKER_00:That's like the knobby twist thing on the TV, static that that era.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah, where crime rates were high as hell in major cities. I believe that.
SPEAKER_00:That's when they were stealing radios out of people's cars. Drugs, yeah. That's the start of uh drugs at that year.
SPEAKER_01:So with that, goes to number 20, which is youth culture leaned, rebellious, and skeptical.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_01:Women's rights momentum was strong. Um, the US military had ended the draft. Probably fun fun fact to know from 50 years ago. The draft ended 50 years ago.
SPEAKER_00:That's a good one. Cause look, man, I don't even bring it back. No, no, no, no, and no. People are gonna be watching TikTok on the battlefield. That's what I'm saying.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, no, uh-uh. I'm too old anyway. I ain't I ain't right. Matter of fact, because you gonna want me. If you need me to fight in a war, the war's over. You lost. If you need me to fight, I'm sorry. They're gonna be cooked, bro.
SPEAKER_01:You remember when um Russia and Ukraine popped off and there was all these uh soldiers streaming on the battlefield? Yeah, it's like off of TikTok and Instagram.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, it's like they showing the highlight, like the highlight room, bro.
SPEAKER_02:That's what CNN is there for. Let CNN do it.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah, let him do it. All right, so to do um, instead of one pick up. Yeah, I got a different one for him.
SPEAKER_02:All right, so we are here with the randomizer.
SPEAKER_01:Ten random questions. Wait, we didn't do the introduction.
unknown:Oh yeah.
SPEAKER_01:Did we do the high welcome to the 60 plus podcast? This is episode seven. My name is Amir.
SPEAKER_00:Mike. And I go by Sweeno.
SPEAKER_01:No, no, no government name. No government name. I don't know who that is. He just sat down and we just started up here.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, he just popped up. He knocked on the door. He came in, he said. They just grab you off the street, to be honest.
SPEAKER_01:See what happens. It's it's not a diddy situation.
SPEAKER_02:He's fine. There's definitely nothing. Yeah, we don't need interest like all right. So we're gonna get into the randomizer. Here's your first question. How much does someone have to pay you to marry them for a green card? For a green card? You give me like 50. That's the lowest you're gonna take 50,000?
SPEAKER_00:Yeah. Okay, I'm not mad at that. 50k. You know what I'm saying? You know, before it would have been like 20, but now inflation. So you didn't double it.
SPEAKER_02:50k, all right. 50k. 50k. Basically, because you might get found out by ice too. Okay, so 75. Yeah, yeah, we're gonna go somebody. I forgot about ice. Yeah, can't forget about ice because if you remember, if you marry somebody from the wrong country, oh yeah, they really gonna be they're gonna send me into that country. Right. I ain't trying to go to Somalia.
SPEAKER_00:I ain't trying to oh yeah, no, no, no, I'm cool.
SPEAKER_02:I'm trying to go to Somalia. I'm good.
SPEAKER_00:I ain't trying to be the part, no diamond trade, nothing.
SPEAKER_01:Nothing. Uh-uh. I don't like knockoff bags, nope. I don't have knockoff wallets, nothing. I don't want to stand on Canal Street. I'm cool. I am fine.
SPEAKER_02:All the way good. That's a fact. Yeah, no, we're good. All right, so 50K though, but 50k. Yeah, I'll go with 50k. All right, so if you out there listening, you got 50k lying around. Hey, man. You need a green card. I got you.
SPEAKER_00:You never know.
SPEAKER_02:And this is hypothetical.
SPEAKER_00:Hypothetical on GTA RP, my bad.
SPEAKER_01:GTA RP, because it is completely illegal to do that now.
SPEAKER_00:Uh-huh. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01:Sure. It wasn't before. No, it wasn't. It was always illegal.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, but but still.
SPEAKER_00:It wasn't as like targeted though. Like now they like they checking everything, bro.
SPEAKER_01:They can check it, that's fine. Alright, so my question to you is if perfect if practice makes perfect and nobody's perfect, then why do we practice?
SPEAKER_00:Just to look good. Doing it. Just to look good. Try your best to look good. Doing it.
SPEAKER_02:That is true. Yeah.
SPEAKER_00:I mean, because if you know you're not is Alright. When you come to the understanding of knowing that nothing in life is perfect, you just do it to the best of your ability. Because you know you there's never gonna be the that perfect, it's never gonna be perfect. So you just do it until you feel satisfy you still feel satisfied. To say, you know what, I did this enough, I think this is good enough. Alright, I'm good.
SPEAKER_02:Interesting. So satisfaction in yourself stops you from chasing perfection that you can never chase. Yeah, that is true.
SPEAKER_00:That you can never achieve. Because if it's nothing is ever perfect. Nothing is perfect, yeah. You might as well just get that 999%.
SPEAKER_01:So you you do it just enough where you're you're you're competent at whatever it is or comfortable with your level of knowledge of it. Whatever you are personally.
SPEAKER_00:Whatever you think is perfect, it doesn't like that. Perfect is like everyone's standard of perfect is different.
SPEAKER_02:Right, perfect.
SPEAKER_00:Perfect could be coming in place and just being on the podium with the rest of the guys. Like, I didn't really want to come in first place, so I don't want that attention. I just wanted to be up here.
SPEAKER_01:Right, right. You want you want a medal, but you don't want to be the type of yeah, yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_00:Like I want to be artists and get paid for what I do, but I don't want to be Justin Bieber to I walk outside my house and I got cameras flashing and I can't even eat breakfast with my family.
SPEAKER_01:You want to be like a LaRussell type of thing, yeah.
SPEAKER_00:You know, like somebody a little chill laid back that everybody will walk past on a day-to-day life, man. You know?
SPEAKER_01:Okay. I like that. Yeah, I think J. Cole has a good medium for that though. Who? J. Cole. Because he he rides around a city and stuff and people don't really bother him.
SPEAKER_00:Like but if they know he's there, it's it's gonna get packed.
SPEAKER_02:I think because it's one of those, there's no disrespect to him, but he looked bummy most of the time when you when you riding around, he'd just be chilling, you know. He got on a regular white t-shirt, some ball shorts, and he got them them dreads. Yeah, he's like a regular dude you would see out in the street. Yeah, you wouldn't, unless you know who it is, you wouldn't, yeah, you would leave him alone.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah, you're right, you're right.
SPEAKER_02:All right, next question. What's the corniest pickup line that's actually worked for you?
SPEAKER_00:Oh man. Who the corniest pickup line, bro? Alright, I ain't gonna lie. So I was having a conversation. And we was we was talking about like, you know, visiting a doctor, keeping up with health. So me, I'm like, hmm. You know, I went to see my doctor. You know, they say I had all my vitamins and stuff. The only one I was lacking was vitamin U. She laughs, you said that was the corniest joke, but you know what I'm saying? But it it got me some points.
SPEAKER_01:So you know what? Is it is it corny based on delivery or based on the person?
SPEAKER_00:I feel like it depends on how you how you say it though, is like you can't just be in the middle of a conversation and say that. Like you have to like kind of like wait until like the conversation is like around that topic. You know what I'm saying? Like, I'm just not gonna be like, yo, I went to the doctor today and he said I got all my vitamins, but I'm like inviting you. She's gonna be like saying out, yeah.
SPEAKER_02:She's gonna be like, doctor, yeah, no, press the buzzer, bro.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, so I like that.
SPEAKER_02:That was clean. That was clean. And like you said, that was in the flow of the flow of what we were saying.
SPEAKER_00:What we were talking about, you know what I'm saying?
SPEAKER_02:It wasn't forced or nothing like that. It got it got it. Once you get a smile out the girl, you did the right thing.
SPEAKER_00:I feel like if you I feel like making them laugh sometimes, or most of the time, is more important than a lot of the stuff that that people like society now think it's important, whether it's money or like material things. Like, if you can make a girl laugh, bro, I guarantee you she'll go on that second date with you. Yep. But she'd rather have a good time than worrying about, oh, he's all flashy and like a lot of the times.
SPEAKER_02:A lot of them don't really care about that, bro. As long as you can have a conversation, make them laugh about it.
SPEAKER_01:Get you a long way. I like that. What's the most you've ever spent on a meal?
SPEAKER_00:On a meal? Um it was my 27th birthday, if I'm not mistaken. I I went to Stay Less. We did like.
SPEAKER_01:Is that the same one you told me about this? Okay, yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_00:So we went, there's like a room where you could like um you kind of like booked the like you booked the room or whatever. I think it's something like that. And it's like um they it's like a set amount of like it might have been like 1,500, and then what it was like 500 for like open bar for like an hour or something. It was something like that. So or like a altogether was probably like 1800, it's like two grand.
SPEAKER_01:Two grand.
SPEAKER_00:But that's worth it. Because I never, I never, I never did it.
SPEAKER_01:Was it worth it?
SPEAKER_00:100%. I don't know. By the time the night was over, I was it looked like somebody poured water in my eyes. I could I could barely see, like, I was so drunk. Yeah, that open bar was worth it. Yeah, like I like that was like a like a crazy night, bro. Like, yeah, see, those nights and those nights are worth it. Yeah, and that made me not drink ever again. So that made me go sober.
SPEAKER_02:Oh, wow. In the words of common, drunk nights get remembered more than sober ones. So that was it for me. Yeah, I like that's very true. I like that. All right. How would you feel if a girl dumped you and told you that you gave her the confidence not to settle? Damn.
SPEAKER_01:That's disrespectful.
SPEAKER_00:I mean, I ain't gonna lie. I done had some. Alright, I don't know if this is related. Uh-huh. Come on. But you have you guys ever seen the movie Good Luck Chuck? Yes. No. How they get with him, and then after they end up finding their person at the end of the day. They're real person, uh-huh. Bro, that was me for a long time. Like, women would I would speak with someone, we'll engage for whatever, like a couple months, and then it'll fall out. And next thing you know, she either got a baby, she's in a uh damn um relationship, like full on, and I'm like, bro, what the what what is doing? Like, doesn't the universe not care about me? Like, why am I the stepping stone? Yeah, but exactly. That's what that's that's what it was. And then I just kind of accepted it. I was like, you know what? I started making a joke out of it to like women that I spoke to in the future, and they were just like, there's no way. And then ends up being them.
SPEAKER_01:That's what's that? What's the odds of that happening? What are the odds of that? What is that?
SPEAKER_00:Like, am I just like, yeah, I'm a step, like I'm a stepping stone to like love and growth. Oh, you're gonna say, yeah, I accepted that.
SPEAKER_02:You might be the opening door for them to see what love and stuff really.
SPEAKER_00:I'll take that. The world loves me. I'll take it.
SPEAKER_02:See? It's red love the right way, yeah.
SPEAKER_00:The right way. I like that. But yeah, man.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah. Do you think your best friend would pick out a good mate for you? That's a nice.
SPEAKER_00:It's been 29 years, bro. Give it up.
SPEAKER_03:No, no, I get no.
SPEAKER_00:No.
SPEAKER_01:Would you would you like to name this person?
SPEAKER_00:Well, all right. Well, it's kind of tricky, right? Because he's, I mean, he's always supported like whoever, like, I would tell him about. Like so, but he's never been like, yo, bro, I ain't gonna lie, I think you should rock out with her. I think she's good for you. He's never once said that. He always be like, I ain't gonna lie, bro, she's pretty. Like, we're like, You're gonna stay with her, but it was never like a confirmed, like, like, yo, you need the wrong one. You need this one. Look, she's doing this, this, this, this. This is the one for you.
SPEAKER_01:But maybe because he just never saw it.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, no, but he's bro, he's he's in a he's set with his shorty. Like, I'd be like, hey, you know what I'm saying? Like, he's got ability. So why you can't tell me, like, when it's ability, yeah.
SPEAKER_02:Help me out, help me. Look for it. Help me out. Okay, traditional gender roles in society, yeah, or completely equal roles in every aspect.
SPEAKER_00:Nah, nah, nah, we're gonna go. We're gonna stick with the norm, man. I grew up with male, female. We're gonna keep it male and female.
SPEAKER_02:I agree.
SPEAKER_00:And if whoever this I haven't I don't discriminate against who whatever you are, alien, you can identify as a table in front of me. That's right. If that's what you want to be, that's not a bad idea. Then so be it. Then so be it. Just don't bring that to me or my kids. There you go. That's it. I I'm with you 100% or the schools.
SPEAKER_02:Yep. Don't hate against nobody. You got no hate for nobody. But understand on this in this brain, that's whatever I grew up.
SPEAKER_00:This that's just what I grew up on, man. So so you're more what traditional or like a shit. Yeah, I'll say, yeah, yeah. I'll I'll say traditional. Yeah, yeah. I'm good. Like, I'm not anti-liberal. I don't, you know what I'm saying? I'm not a conservative, or but there's a lot of stuff I just don't agree with.
SPEAKER_01:Well, like if she if she cooks and cleans and does that stuff when you do all the the hard work type of thing.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, I mean, yeah, that's that's cool. That's cool. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01:All right, all right, that's pretty cool.
SPEAKER_00:I mean, it just depends. Like, did we both work hard to get to that point, or did you just want a dude to come into your life and just provide for you? Provide for you. Yeah, you know what I'm saying?
SPEAKER_02:Like, but if you're the housewife, the house should be clean. Yeah, like they should be fool. Like, if that's what you're doing. Same for the dude. If there's the dude staying at home and the and the woman go to work, guess what? Nigga, you better clean the house. Yeah, everything needs to be right. It's the same thing.
SPEAKER_01:I agree.
SPEAKER_00:I respect that. Yeah, 100%.
SPEAKER_01:And I don't mind cleaning, I just can't cook. I'll do everything else.
SPEAKER_00:Oh, no, I'd cook. I can make I can make a good breakfast. There you go. For me, that's about it, though. We go to aha for dinner sometime, right? I mean, uh uh, you're not even gonna lie. Breakfast is like the only thing I've ever tried hard to make. Like, I can't make, I ain't gonna lie, I can't. I never made rice today in my life, bro. Really? But now they got rice cooking. You know what I'm saying? I didn't have to learn how to whip that silver pot like mom dukes, you know, shots.
SPEAKER_02:But that's where the flavor comes from.
SPEAKER_00:That metal pot. You know what I'm saying? Scraping the hard rice at the bottom.
SPEAKER_01:Uh-uh. Yep. Yeah, rice cookers are pretty good. Why do kids sing at graduation?
SPEAKER_00:Why do they sing? I mean, bro, I mean, you're full of joy. You I wanted to sing. I didn't know why. I just felt like I just wanted to sing.
SPEAKER_02:I think it was, I think it's kind of forced. I think so. Think about it. You go to school to learn, you singing a song for your parents, and a bunch of random people.
SPEAKER_00:I mean, what'd you learn? I mean, what we what was the oh you're right. I remember singing Celine Dion.
SPEAKER_02:Like why? Always some random song. Like I had to sing the Beatles before, let it be. Like, what do that gotta do?
SPEAKER_00:I forgot what song, like, dang, but it was definitely Celine Dion because I remember because I went, my school was like third, third through six, and I will see the graduations sing that same Celine Dion song. So every year. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01:Every year. Is it like a reference point? Is there like a I don't know?
SPEAKER_00:There's no reference point we'll we'll we'll circle back to it and um we'll put it like somewhere on the thing, just because I'm I'm gonna search it up because I'm like, let's see why you kids, yeah.
SPEAKER_02:I need to find out. Yeah, because it's sing at graduation. Yeah, Celine Dion, man. Cause it's like, I don't understand. We do all this singing for what? We don't all right. Kids sing at graduation to celebrate a major milestorm, build confidence by performing, foster a sense of community, and help process big transitions, creating lasting memories for themselves and their families as they move from one stage of learning to the next. Wow.
SPEAKER_01:Why can't we build a sandcastle? I don't want to be a little bit more.
SPEAKER_00:I used to run into sandcastles.
SPEAKER_01:Let's go.
SPEAKER_00:But I got I got influenced by degenerate cousins and delinquents, you know what I'm saying? So I blame them. As long as it wasn't Orchard Beach Sand, you get it. It definitely was Orchard Beach Sand. Yes. Most of the time, like eight out of ten times, it was maybe Orchard Beach, and then you know, maybe Coney and somewhere at Brian Beach or something.
SPEAKER_01:Uh Orchard. That's hepatitis.
SPEAKER_00:Good old Orchard. Almost got lost in Orchard Beach. Almost got almost fell into the rocks. Oh, damn. Yeah. Oh nah. I got my whooped. Oh, yeah. Uh huh. Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:Like, oh, thank you. You safe. Come here. I'm gonna beat you.
SPEAKER_00:Boon's cheeks, bro, when I got home, bro. Yeah, it was no joke, right?
SPEAKER_01:Wait, question. Let's let's do a follow-up question for this one. What's the worst beach in New York?
SPEAKER_00:Definitely, no, it's definitely uh Orchard Beach. You don't go in the water at Orchard Beach. You go to Orchard Beach for the boardwalk. Yeah, yeah. You like the vibes are always on the boardwalk. The boardwalk or hoops in the sun. Yeah. Like depending on what you want to do, like, but you like never I'm I mean each own. I don't go to I don't go to I don't even go to beach water in general. I'm not I'm not I'm not a fan of me neither. I'm not a fan of beaches. The ocean. Well like the ocean, though. I'm I'm good. I got like the lasophobia or something. Who? That's like a um you're like afraid of girl? What? The lassophobia. It's like you're afraid of though, like open water, like ocean. Oh shit. Yeah, like big open water. Yeah, I'm good. Ocean escape. I'm with him on this one. Ocean scary as a. Yeah, no, I'm good, bro.
SPEAKER_02:That's the fish's house. We don't belong in a house. We breathe a stay house. We breathe air. Yep. Yep, they got it. They got it. We don't belong there. I'm sorry. We don't. Nor do we fly, so. Mm-mm. I keep it.
SPEAKER_01:Your lighters on.
SPEAKER_02:Oh bad. All right. What current artist would you want to perform at your wedding?
SPEAKER_00:At my wedding? Oh man. Let me see. It got I.
SPEAKER_02:Now the person you get in is the current version of them. So like if you said Stevie Wonder, you're not getting Stevie Wonder from the 80s. You get now. Okay.
SPEAKER_00:I go. I go Rod Wave Justin Bieber. And uh I'll go Adele.
SPEAKER_02:Rod Wave, Justin Bieber, and Adele. Okay. That's actually like a nice lineup, though. That's the interesting three. Because you got the singer of the hip hop.
SPEAKER_00:No, but he got like the like the sad. Like, you feel good. Like, it's it's like it makes you like the hip-hop. It's like the hip-hop sad. Yeah. Right. And then you got you got JB that could give you like the like the love. The love. But also the mixture, you know what I'm saying? And then you got a devil that's just gone, she's gonna take it. You know what I'm saying? That's how you start it off. Rod Wave, then Justin Bieber, and then the devil to finish it. I like that. Like that.
SPEAKER_02:That's not bad. That's clean. That's clean. I like that. Yeah, I take that any day. Who's a musical artist that everyone loves that you don't like? Kodak Black. Y'all like that. 100%.
SPEAKER_00:I got a painting of him in my room. That's not much of a fan. I don't know why they don't like him, bro.
SPEAKER_02:No, no, no.
SPEAKER_00:Who you I thought you said somebody that I like that.
SPEAKER_02:No, that everyone else loves, but you like, nah, this thing is whack.
SPEAKER_00:Oh, um. Dang. That everybody Cardi? And it's nothing against her person.
SPEAKER_02:Right.
SPEAKER_00:It's just her music.
SPEAKER_02:I'm not a fan of. The musician. Okay, I'm not mad at that. Because Cardi rapped like she reading.
SPEAKER_00:She couldn't even read off. You know what? Never mind. Cardi's good. I'll leave that where I leave it at. You know? I'm just going strictly off the the politics when she was trying to read the TV scan. Oh, what was it? The um the the jump the band. The teleprompter. She was trying to read the teleprompter. Yeah, the teleprompter. And it just was so like it was just bad.
SPEAKER_02:So the the dems when he was talking when she did the smaller.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:I think that's something that's harder than people realize. Reading from a teleprompter. Reading from a teleprompter. I think that's a lot harder than people think. It is, man. Because it's usually when you read, all your words are usually in front of you.
SPEAKER_00:I feel like if I got like a whole bunch of like millions of people in front of me, I'm going to be looking at the teleprompter, but I'm going to be so spaced out that I'm like, and then and then you give this one random person in the audience.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, bro. Like, oh man. Uh huh. Word. That's a fact. That's a fact. Human nature time. Human nature. Shout out to Michael Jackson. Yeah. And SWV and Chris Brown and whoever else repeats human nature, mad me, that's true.
SPEAKER_01:That's true. So this is going to be the, as everyone said, the human nature section. Chris has picked his numbers, and now he we shall seal his fate with these questions.
SPEAKER_00:Let's do it, man.
SPEAKER_01:I'll start off this one. What is a childhood memory that still shapes how you see the world today?
SPEAKER_00:Wow. A childhood memory that shapes how I see the world today. Does that be like a good memory, bad memory? It's up to you. It's your choice. Whatever you want to share. I had to have been maybe like 10 years old or something. But my grandmother lived on a sixth floor. I live on the fourth floor. We're gonna fast forward it. I was playing on the roof when I shouldn't have. And it was me and my cousin, and I'm looking over the roof, and my cousin pushes me and pulls me. And that let me know that my life can be taken at any moment. And life could end just like that.
SPEAKER_01:Yo.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah.
SPEAKER_01:I would have hit him.
SPEAKER_00:Yes. Yeah, I was like looking over the ladder.
SPEAKER_02:He said, I was like, uh that's not cool.
SPEAKER_00:Nah.
SPEAKER_02:Once I would've stopped peeing on myself, we gotta fight.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, we all I mean we all got beat for being up there, but right.
SPEAKER_02:Hey man, after that, I was like, I still got it worse.
SPEAKER_00:I was like, bro, I do have a fear of like heights and stuff. That's probably what triggered. That's probably why. Man, he traumatizes me, bro. Cause you did me dirty, man. Oh, he owe you a dinner or something. Chop G's, bro. I'll take a chop G's.
SPEAKER_02:You need reparations.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, bro.
SPEAKER_02:That's wow. That was a good that was a memory, yeah. But it's like you said though, in an instant, your life is here and it could easily be a good thing. That's how quick, bro. That's how quick. Right. That's insane, man. That's a that's a heavy one.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:Well, for look. That took a turn, my bad. You know, well, off of that, what's one fear that you've overcome that you're proud of?
SPEAKER_00:Oh man, a fear, bro. There's only one thing I and it's so and it's so funny, you guys probably might laugh. But I'm scared of elevators, man.
SPEAKER_01:I don't blame you. I don't blame you.
SPEAKER_00:But um, the reason why is because I always have dreams of getting squashed by elevators, and I don't know why. I could be like this. My dream could be me having a podcast. Next thing you know, I'm I spawn on top of elevator and it's going up super fast. And then I look up. On some final destiny. Yo, like, bro, like, like, why? Why? This is like all the time. On some final destiny. So, what's your brain trying to tell you? I don't know, bro, but this is this is constant, bro.
SPEAKER_02:So you coming up here, yeah, is like that's a thing.
SPEAKER_00:I don't really like like like tall buildings and elevators, bro. That thing creeps me out, bro.
SPEAKER_01:You know what's funny? You say that I was going down the elevator uh a couple weeks ago with this lady, and she was like, Thank god you're coming in this elevator with me as well, because she's terrified of taking elevators by herself. Yeah, bro. I know I didn't know it was an actual thing until you said it. I didn't thought about it.
SPEAKER_00:I got stuck on the elevator like on the 27th floor, and this was like I felt like dude, I'm claustrophobic. Bro, I was like, I just like I didn't know what to do. I just lay down. I was about to say, if you ever go to the projects, what do you do? I mean, but the projects, they like they go up to like 14, 15. But them elevators don't work. Now they don't, all right. Either they close mad fast, and they go up really fast too. So it's like it's a it's it's a tricky ride, but you get up there quick.
SPEAKER_02:You know, you don't want to take the stairs in the projects. You don't want to take the biggest.
SPEAKER_00:Right. Bro, piss, urine, like you.
SPEAKER_02:And then before who's on the stairs, yeah. Asking you why you're taking the stairs. That's the other thing. Yeah, wow. Yeah, bro. Cause that's that's a that's a tough one to navigate. Like, so then wait a minute. So then say you go to like that restaurant where it's like all the way up to the street.
SPEAKER_00:I wouldn't, I wouldn't, I would never do that. You can never, okay. Yeah, I would I wouldn't do nothing like that. Copy. I'm good. Copy. Yeah, I'm cool. All right, y'all. So no heights, no heights. Um that's that's kind of why I don't really like to fly, but if I have to fly, I go. But I'd be scared the whole flight. I can never sleep on a flight. Yeah, me never. No matter how tired I am.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, me neither. I can't do it. Oh man, I drill.
SPEAKER_00:Nah. I wish I could. I can't I'm the same way. Any slight like turbulence, it won't even gotta be, it won't even be turbulence, but any slight movement of the plane, I'm up like this. Like a deer in the headlights, bro. I'm the same way.
SPEAKER_02:That's why I don't sit on the train. I can't sit on the train either. Like when people go to sleep on a train, I don't know how they do it.
SPEAKER_00:I I don't so it happened to me.
SPEAKER_01:So the article, there's a there was a I was listening to 1010 yesterday. I said listening to 1010 wins and um they were talking about this this kid lit this guy on fire because he was asleep on the train.
SPEAKER_00:Oh, yeah, I seen that. I seen that. Yeah, I seen that.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah. Why are you comfortable enough to sleep on the train? That's my thing.
SPEAKER_00:I mean, I sleep on a train if it's a lot of people.
SPEAKER_02:Especially if you if you come in from work, like I understand. I used to be in high school, bro. I should be like, if you if you're coming from far, like if you go to school out in Brooklyn and you live in the Bronx, that ride is gonna get you, bro. It's a long ride.
SPEAKER_00:You all you hear is dun dun, dun, dun. You like and like imagine you on the B train.
SPEAKER_01:The B train is local. So if you gotta go local, that's killer. I mean, I fall asleep on the seven, but I was this was like the early 2010s. Right. You know, this wasn't the maybe the Noble.
SPEAKER_00:On the bus, barbecues, like I'm that I'm that guy, bro. Like, I'm that guy that could be we could be just getting there. I'm eating, yeah, yeah, everybody's joining. Five minutes you look over, I'm like this. Harriet Tubman syndrome. Bro, like that's crazy. I just become that's wild.
SPEAKER_01:I'm that guy. So after you've overcome um elevators, you know, your fear of elevators. Yeah, how do you recharge when life feels heavy?
SPEAKER_00:How do I recharge? I either, well, I got a dog for moments like that. So it's either I just go home and receive that unconditional love for my pet, or I go grab my camera and I think of something to do, whether shoot content for myself, or eat a nice meal and just reset and just think about all the good things that happened in my life and not worry about the past nor the future, but just stay in the middle.
SPEAKER_02:Alright. Stay in the present. We like to we like to stay in the present. Stay in the present. Stay in the middle. What kind of dog you got?
SPEAKER_00:I got a golden doodle. You know, they those are Velcro dogs, man.
SPEAKER_02:On my phone.
SPEAKER_01:Let me see. Hey, oh, okay. One of them kinds. Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah. Okay. It's like the bigger fried chicken dog you've got to do. Yeah, exactly. Exactly.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, 100%.
SPEAKER_01:That's what's up.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah.
SPEAKER_01:Cool.
SPEAKER_02:That's adorable.
SPEAKER_00:Golden Doodle. It's my boy, man.
SPEAKER_02:All right. When was the last time you surprised yourself?
SPEAKER_00:Hey, bro, I ain't gonna lie. This might be a film recorder thing, but color grading. Color grading might work.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah, what do you use, DaVinci or Premier Pro?
SPEAKER_00:I use Premiere Pro, and people think I use a whole bunch of stuff. Or even on my phone, I'll do a cinematic thing with my phone and I'll just grade it on like Cap Cut. And they like, yo, bro, what did you take that way? It looks 12k. And I'm like, oh even the video I took today, they thought it was AI. If like five people say, bro, that was AI, and I'm like, bro, I just did it with cinematic mode and Cap Cut.
SPEAKER_01:What's your go-to? Um is it option?
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, so you have like so you have exposure, highlight, contrast, shadows, white, dark, like what was it? White, black, and yeah, like what are some of your go-tos to like really get it? I'm like a real moody kind of like you could say filmmaker or whatever, but I like to go for dark tones, so I'm real like on the like shadow, like exposure highlight side. Like that's where like I kind of like down, yeah, shadow. Depending on like depending on like how the image is, obviously. But yeah. Um, yeah, I'm more of like a yeah, I like the dark tones, dark tones, you know. I'm more of like a contrasty kind of guy. If you yeah.
SPEAKER_02:So for the people who not hip, what's color grading and gradients and all that stuff, because I'm I'm sitting here. I yell at people.
SPEAKER_00:I'm the people who I thought I thought I only said it because I thought he was in the same realm with like, you know, because we all, you know, think about it. The glasses fool you. It's all nah, it's all good. Okay, so as you can see, what we what we are being recorded on the black magic, right? So you can either record them in black magic raw, which is a flat profile, colorless, and then you add the color to it. So it's black and white. It's grayism. Got it. Yeah, so it's black and white, but yeah, it's not gray, it's just like a flat gray profile. Okay, got it. And with that, you can bring color to the image from rather than let's say you do it in ProRes, which is like a like how you record on your iPhone, you saw there's already Pro Resolution, right? Yeah, so it's you can't really there's not much room to work with. You can't change that. And this is what it did. But you can, but it's like it's like little minute changes, yeah. Right. Where as far as raw, you can do a lot. Like yeah, you know, knock a bit much. You can get in depth if I wanted to. Yeah, I mean, yeah, that's that's like a whole that's like different, but like you could like really like get in depth with like the color and the mood and like a lot of stuff, yeah.
SPEAKER_02:So what is it about photography that like sets you at ease? Or videography, yeah, or videography.
SPEAKER_00:So I actually started off with uh taking uh portraits 2017. I I had a Nikon D3300, so from that it went to uh Sony A6000, then a 5D Mark II, then A7R2, 3, A73. Well, I had like a bunch of cameras. So 2017 to 2020, I was like my camera portrait phase, and then 2020 was like COVID-ish. And then I just started doing video here and there. And from you could say video, like I I feel like I could tell more of a story with with video rather than a picture. Because you could I could show you a picture, you say, all right, that's cool. All right, how many times you're gonna go back and look at that picture though?
SPEAKER_03:Right.
SPEAKER_00:Rather than a video, you see, let's say me recording LeBron James doing like crazy highlight. You're gonna if it's dope, you're gonna go back. Yeah, because I could I could add music to it, I can add effects to it, you know what I'm saying? Like rather than creativity as well. Yeah, you know, like it really like it makes you get creative like at your own pace, you know.
SPEAKER_02:So what made you pick up a camera in the first place? Like going back to 2017? What even made you pick up a camera?
SPEAKER_00:So before pictures, I was venturing into modeling because I wanted to like be in front of the camera rather than then behind it. So a friend of mine, shout out to Carlos. Um, he actually just lost like over 200 and something pounds. He was like foreign change, he's like 170. Wow, salutes to him. Shout out to him. Natural, right? Natural. Okay. Now he runs marathons and he could probably he runs way farther than me now. So um, yeah, shout out to Carlos, man. Uh so he is a photographer as well. Copy. And he I met him, he lived across the street from me. And one day um we were walking outside, and he was like, uh, we just like kind of like just saw each other a few times like neighbors, you know what I'm saying? Right. So I seen he had a camera and he and he was like, yo, I'm about to take some test shots. You mind if I use you? So he was talking about me. And I'm like, well, all right, I'm not gonna say no to free pictures. Like, you know what I'm saying? Right. So after he took the pictures, I was like, yo, I gotta get my hands on one of these, bro. This is dope. So I started like, you know, like um like shadowing him and just like learning as he's, you know, certain angles, you know, you get a little lower, give a little depth of field. Uh-uh. Like learning like a little ins outs, you know what I'm saying? So um I went and like saved up a few hundred bucks, 600 bucks. I got like a little DSLR, something to start off with. It wasn't too crazy. Right. But I gained some experience and then saved my money to get a better camera. So I sold that camera, got a bigger camera. And then I will go on shoots with him and start taking pictures of the people he was with and learning like that. So after a while, I was just like, I ain't gonna lie, I'm actually pretty good at this. Like, you know what I'm saying? After like learning and you know, just getting comfortable with it. At first it was a headache because I'm like, yo, how does these pictures come like this? And mine's look like I just took some BS. Yeah, yeah, like right. Like so, yeah, man. That's that's how it all, that's how it all started, really. Something just random and it turned into a profession. Like, that's kind of dope. That's cool. And still to this day, you know, we I seen him not too long ago. He was running in the marathon um back in September. I think it was October. Was it October? October, October. And he ran the marathon 20 26.2 miles. Yeah, yeah, bro. That's that's insane, bro. What motivates you to go after your goals? My goals is definitely my family. Um, I can say myself, but that's a little bit cliche because we think about that all the time every day. Right. But um, yeah, it's definitely my family. I want, I just I see I can see the big house. I can see the big house. And I'm not telling I don't want no fancy cars, whatever. I always said I wanted a driver before I want a car. So I just want to sit in the back of a nice uh escalate, you know what I'm saying?
SPEAKER_01:Uh-huh.
SPEAKER_00:Um and get driven around. Like enjoy the fruits, like you know what I'm saying? Enjoy the fruits of your labor. So I would say it's family. Of course, I want to, you know, be established as um you could say a filmmaker, or like in that field, have my own video production company. You know what I'm saying? So um the motivation is just the grind. The motivation is the grind in my family.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah. It's internal.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, it's like it's stuff that you you have now, and then never know, it can be gone. So like money, you can always earn it again. You can always find a way to you can't earn your family again. Like it's just it just it just doesn't happen like that. You know what I'm saying? So um, for the people that didn't get to see that aren't here anymore, that's another, you know what I'm saying? So that's right. It yes, it's you can say it's that.
SPEAKER_02:I feel internal and motivation is always better than external motivation too. It is because external motivation can be better. It's like a fire that never gets put out. Right. Internal is always there, no matter what. It it always just depends on you. So if you can bring that up, then you'll be good.
SPEAKER_01:I like that. I think it's like if you can champion your own self, you don't need anyone else.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah. If you do it, yeah, if you do it for yourself, bro, like it's like the end goal is is gonna be much better than what you envisioned. So let's say you aim for a million dollars, you're gonna do so good that$10 million are gonna fall in your lap. Right. You're gonna be like, damn, I didn't even know I was like, I was capable of doing that. Right, right.
SPEAKER_01:You know, after you find the things that motivates you to go after your goal, what's the best way to support you when you're going through a hard time?
SPEAKER_00:I'm I'm big on space, man. Like, I I what is that called? Like uh I survive on being alone, but not to the point where if I'm alone, it's gonna hurt me. No, I just I like I I learned to love love myself enough to I could strive in my in my own space, you know. So even like if you shoot send me a text, okay, yeah. So I'm gonna read it, respond. It might not I might not respond that day, but I'm gonna see it, you know, and then you know when I when I get time to respond, I'll just I'll I'll appreciate, you know, I'll appreciate you for it. But yeah, I'm I've always been very very closed. Do you consider yourself an introvert? As far as my feelings, yeah.
SPEAKER_02:Okay.
SPEAKER_00:Like I'm very like closed off when it comes to my feelings. Yeah, like, but if you you can ask anybody, like anyone has ever gone through something, look at their phone. Who's texting them or who's calling them? Me. Right. You know, yeah, I I should take that advice and let people do it for me, but it's hard. Like, I'm very I could be very prideful at times too, because it's like, oh, I don't need anybody. But then again, I'm like, damn, like I'm gonna figure it out. Why nobody ever come look for me? You being prideful, like you know what I'm saying?
SPEAKER_02:So you sound you sound like Wale, that Wale record power and problems. Like he says his power is that he does it itself, but his biggest problem is that I'm doing it myself and I don't rely on other people. Yeah, and it's times where you do need to ask for help sometimes, the same way people come to you and ask for help. And it and it's a hard balance, but when you are able to do for yourself, you think, oh, there's nothing I can't do for myself.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:Mm-hmm.
SPEAKER_00:It's that it's that feeling of being vulnerable that we we have like trouble sometimes getting to.
SPEAKER_02:You know, especially letting someone else see you vulnerable. Yeah, see you vulnerable. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, there's only a few people that have ever like let me see like that. Like it's a handful. Like maybe my parents, like right, right, that ever see you at that moment, and then we move on.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah, if you guys are listening this far, subscribe, like, comment. Let us know what you think so far. We're still in the draft phase.
SPEAKER_00:Please leave a like, comment, subscribe. Prepare for more. Come on. Yes, yeah, no, you already know, man. What he says. This is all socials, man. Right, right. Yeah, yeah, I know what it is. If you've been here this long, there's no way you didn't be like, you know what? Maybe I should hit that button.
SPEAKER_01:Just hit the button. See what they do. Don't be nosy.
SPEAKER_02:But if you kept coming back this, come on, just go ahead. Do you have the uh other, right? You know what? No, but I I got some other questions. You got some other questions? That's okay.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah, so so far in we are still, and this is for the audience as well, whoever's listening, we're still, as we said, in the figuring out the podcast space. We have guests on, we have people on. But it's one of those things like um, for example, it's like we told Gil, like, you're welcome to come back at any episode. Yeah, like it's not just it's our podcast, but we would like to have one of those things where let's say in the future, let's say for some example, some crazy thing later down the road, we managed to get hype Williams on the podcast.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, for sure.
SPEAKER_01:Chris, you need to come back on. Yeah, because you're in the space, he's in the space. Come in, ask him questions, let's have a conversation on air. Like build. So, yeah, build, you know. Yeah, 100%. So, this is this is also what I want to structure the podcast around is it's not that it's not just us, but like if we have someone on that kind of falls into what You're doing in the lane of yeah. Yeah, but like just come on, just come third mica, you know, co-host it for that episode and and make a connection. Natural connection. I like that. Natural connection.
SPEAKER_00:So it's uh I Williams. They they said it, so now you gotta come, so I can be the co-host.
SPEAKER_02:Now have to happen.
SPEAKER_00:Now you gotta come.
SPEAKER_01:I use him, but yeah, it could be any.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah.
SPEAKER_01:Uh what's it uh uh F F in Rivera? F uh I Rivera? If Rivera? Yeah, that's 50 cents.
SPEAKER_00:He does a lot of a lot of 50 cents stuff too. These are not. Oh, there's a lot of that he's like probably the king of music videos for the like the industry, I would say.
SPEAKER_01:Or um, is it it's not lemonade?
SPEAKER_00:Um lyrical lemonade? Lyrical lemonade, yeah. The little juice box. Uh-huh. Yeah, now he's cool too.
SPEAKER_01:I think he did uh Jack Harlow's.
SPEAKER_00:No, yeah, he did a lot too. Yeah. Yeah, there's a lot like on the rise.
SPEAKER_01:Right, what's poppin'? Yeah. But, anyways, we're gonna go into the reflection round. Mike has a change of questions that we're gonna switch up a little bit.
SPEAKER_02:Let's do it. Based on what you said, I think this question will be interesting. Would you rather be trapped on a broken elevator or stuck on a broken ski lift? A broken ski lift? What is even that? Do you want do you want all of us to answer these questions? Yeah, we all can answer these. No, no, no, no, no. So you know like you go on a mountain joint, right? And you sit down and they put you on that and then it's like, yeah, and you took that that that thing that slides across like Roosevelt Island, like that thing. So would you rather be stuck in an elevator?
SPEAKER_00:Oh, elevator for sure. You'd rather be stuck in a room. Elevator for sure. And you never said what floor.
SPEAKER_02:You never said what floor. Okay. You got a point. All right, so then how about this? 30th floor on the elevator, stuck on a ski lift, broken ski lift. How far off the ground?
SPEAKER_00:Damn, but those things are pretty high, though. Those ski lifts. They're very high. And they're and that's real. Nah, I'll take elevator because I tell you why. Elevators always always have those have like safety mechanisms. Push the button or something. Yeah, or even even if it like, even if it would never fall all the way down because they have like these things, like sensors that Right. Yeah. So if you want a ski lift, it's you and the scary. It's scary being suspended in the air, like in the elevator for sure, like stuck. The fear of just being stuck is like, oh shit, I'm stuck. But right. Like that ski thing, then it'd be like. And if the if the wind blows, nah, I'm sure.
SPEAKER_02:The only positive is that if you cross the if you claustrophobic, the ski lift might be better if you claustrophobic because you're outside.
SPEAKER_00:Or you could just jump out and land in the snow.
SPEAKER_02:But how deep is the snow? How deep is it? That's the thing. Because you mess your whole kneecap up.
SPEAKER_00:I mean, hey man, you better cannonball it. You know what I'm saying?
SPEAKER_02:Well, there goes your spine. Yeah, you better cannonball it, bro. All right.
SPEAKER_00:Would you rather be able to talk to animals or speak a language of your choosing? I'll do the language because I wouldn't want to know what the heck my dog is is gonna say to me.
SPEAKER_01:I was I was talking to someone about that this morning. So I was on FaceTime with her on the train coming in. And she just woke up, but her cat just kept walking around. Like she had the phone popped up on the pillow. Right. Right? But her cat just kept walking.
SPEAKER_00:And I'm like, Yeah, cats are cats are very thinking.
SPEAKER_01:Cats are evil.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, I was gonna say, very mischievous animals.
SPEAKER_01:And then and then the cat would stand on the bed behind and just like look. But if I could push you right now, well, your cats are evil.
SPEAKER_00:Like animals, honestly, no, because like my dog looks very human already with his like eyes, he like we got they have human eyes. So at times he's looking at me and I'm thinking he's judging me. So I'm like, yo, what are you doing? Yeah, like I'm hungry, bro. Like, feed me. Like, imagine if I like I walk in, he's like, yo, all right, about time, feed me. I'm like, what? Wait, what? Yeah, like I don't want to like the intimate moments with like laying with him, he'll probably be like, all right, bro, get off me. And I'm like, that would feel so weird. Like, yo, I'm hot, man. Get off me. Yeah, you know what I'm saying? Like, I wouldn't even want to hang around him as much. I'd be like, yo, nah, you're good, bro.
SPEAKER_01:But then let's take that to the other side. Animals can see things that we can't. That's true. What would they tell you?
SPEAKER_02:Like, yo, you don't know this hurricane is coming? You don't feel this, yeah.
SPEAKER_01:Like the geese, like the gooses or whatever geese is like flying and stuff. Imagine you sleep and your cat awakes, wakes up, and looks at the door and be like, Why are you standing there?
SPEAKER_00:Oh, yeah. They say dogs, they say dogs could see see like um what's uh dead people?
SPEAKER_01:Ghosts?
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, like ghosts and stuff like that.
SPEAKER_01:Like they say cats can see ghosts as well. Yeah, cats can also tell good people. Because they not good people.
SPEAKER_02:That's why because cats are not good people. That's why they know who's a good person.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, no. I mean, hey, that it has its pros and cons. Right. Yeah, no, I'm good. No, no, no.
SPEAKER_02:I don't want to know what the rat is saying. I learned a lot.
SPEAKER_00:I would like to speak another language, though. I'm not gonna lie.
SPEAKER_02:I probably speak like if you had to pick a language, what language would you pick to learn?
SPEAKER_00:Uh I'd probably say like Japanese or something.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah, uh Mandarin for sure.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, like one of those like speak like Tibetan or something, like one of them hard languages. Right.
SPEAKER_01:Like a like a Russian type.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, I would do sign language.
SPEAKER_02:I would like to learn sign language.
SPEAKER_00:Sign language? I mean, you can do that now.
SPEAKER_02:That's uh that's like I feel like it's on the easier side of but I think it depends on which because like there's American sign, like it doesn't it depend on where you are? No, like isn't it like American sign language, and then like is it aren't there different kinds of sign language? No, I heard I think it's just one universal.
SPEAKER_00:They'd be like, uh-uh, like you always see like the same, like the same because I would love to learn the sign. I think that would be kind of cool. Yeah, like it would be like that movie Bird Bird Box, right? Right Quiet, like Quiet Place, I mean, yeah. So we're gonna do we're gonna do a Naruto, like Jutsu's. Yeah, right.
SPEAKER_01:Jutsu's like, come on. So we're gonna do something a lot of podcasts refuse to do. It's actually research whilst we are uh pardon. So there are several so sign languages are not universal. Uh sign language is language-based, not gesture-based. So different countries. Oh, so you was right. That's crazy. Different countries, not and even regions develop their own full languages with unique grammar and vocabulary. So American.
SPEAKER_00:Wait, so yeah, you're that means you would have to that means you would know all of them?
SPEAKER_02:That would be crazy.
SPEAKER_01:Wow, that now I would have to pick one. So ASL would be different than BSL. So American Sign Language would be different than British Sign Language would be different than LSF, which would be the French Sign Language. Oh, see, I didn't even know that.
SPEAKER_00:I thought sign language was universal.
SPEAKER_02:That's a lot. So then imagine if you are if you know American Sign Language, but you go to France. It's the same as speaking the language. They're gonna think you're throwing away. Like, are you speaking something? What do you call me?
SPEAKER_01:Yeah, right? What do you think? Wait, hold up, hold up. So there is international sign um used at international events, it's not a native language. It says a pigeon style mix of signs meant for cross communication.
SPEAKER_00:Wow. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01:That's what's up. So there is an international sign, but those are for like it's like a UN type of right, right. Yeah, that's interesting. That's a lot. That's all right. Okay. That's a lot of like. And they also evolve just like languages evolve as well. So new sign languages are evolved, um, creative.
SPEAKER_02:That is true. So, like, so like in a so if there's new words that we make up or we add to the to the dictionary, or like new saying. So, like, let's say six, seven. Let's say that actually gets added to the dictionary. For sign language, are they just going like this for six seven? But is this also weighing your option? Right, that's what I'm saying. But I don't know.
SPEAKER_00:Or like, what are we doing?
SPEAKER_02:Right, like where which one? I don't know. Seriously, uh pick a hand, pick a hand, yeah. Right? I don't know. Especially when new stuff gets added to the language, like slang and stuff like that.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, that's why brain rot is no good, bro. Yep, it's no good, bro.
SPEAKER_02:All right, last question. What are some things you wish you understood better? Women, bro. Oh, yeah. I ain't gonna lie. We think we know them.
SPEAKER_00:We don't. Do they know them? They don't know them, they don't even know themselves. They have no idea what's going on. How you say that, right? We're gonna get canceled. We gotta get canceled seven episodes in.
SPEAKER_01:These guys are yo, women don't know themselves. How dare they? Dog people. I mean, yeah, I mean you ever seen them get mad because you're not mad.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, like how you mad because I don't react the way you want me to react.
SPEAKER_02:I I don't that happened to me a lot. Because as someone who doesn't get mad, yeah, why aren't you mad? I'm not cuz I just don't I don't care enough, right? Like not enough for me to get mad. Oh, like is something wrong? No, I'm cool. Nah, are you sure?
SPEAKER_01:I just said I'm okay. I'm okay. Yeah.
SPEAKER_00:That's true. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01:But besides that, is there anything that Mike, what's the question again? That you wish you understood better.
SPEAKER_00:Um, like other than women, I would say you know what? Nah. I would say nah, I don't know. There's nothing. I just want to like learn it as I go with life.
SPEAKER_02:I like that.
SPEAKER_00:I don't want to understand anything better. I just want to as it's as it's coming to me, I want to You want to enjoy the journey. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01:Right. Okay.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah. Right.
SPEAKER_01:Enjoying the journey for sure.
SPEAKER_00:Because if I understand it, then I'm gonna like gonna ex like kinda expect like know where you like where it's going. You know what I'm saying? And no one likes to know it all. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01:Prepare for it, you're gonna be able to do it.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, I can prepare for it, and then yeah, come on. So that is part of the thrill of it too. Love me. Like the surprise, like you never know. Right. The thought of not knowing what's gonna happen, it's it's could be hit or miss. You know what I'm saying?
SPEAKER_01:So but yeah, being being oblivious, you're much happier.
SPEAKER_00:That's what I'm saying. You yeah, you're much happy. Ignorance is bliss. That's where the phrase comes from. Ignorance is a blessing. It's good.
SPEAKER_02:Not knowing stuff is good. It's a very good thing.
SPEAKER_00:Not knowing nothing is a different thing. Now that's different, yes. But you know, not knowing a little bit is alright, you know what I'm saying?
SPEAKER_01:Mm-hmm.
SPEAKER_00:Like that goes back to the perfect thing.
SPEAKER_01:Nobody is perfect, like you know, nobody got a callback.
SPEAKER_00:Nobody is that goes back to that, man.
SPEAKER_01:Okay, so before we uh we close out this bad boy of uh episode, we're gonna talk about bad boy and those episodes.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, I'm trying better.
SPEAKER_01:I'm trying my better. Getting better. You couldn't do that episode one, so like thumbs up. Yo, wait till episode like 20.
SPEAKER_00:Take that, take that. Good job, take that, take that, right? That's crazy. That sounds even crazier now, bro.
SPEAKER_01:Uh, so yeah, we're gonna talk about because it is a trending topic, and like everything on social media, podcasting and world entertainment, you have to talk about things that are trending in order to stay in the algorithm. I just said all of that without thinking or blinking. Um, so you guys want to talk about the uh the petty the petty documentary?
SPEAKER_02:The reckoning. The reckoning. Executive produced by 50 Cent about Diddy. Yep. Um, he's not the only executive producer on there, too. There was a lot of people that worked on this project, yeah, but he's the name to help get it out there, and especially 50 hates Diddy. I was gonna say, if anybody else uses right. It's the name you use to get out there, but there was a whole team and stuff behind it.
SPEAKER_01:So my question is uh, is this anything new to you guys? Or is this like did you say it?
SPEAKER_00:It was like a lot uh like we were like waiting for this. Like we weren't sure when, but we knew like what was gonna come to the light. Like then again, like this is not none I got nothing against anyone, you know what I'm saying? Like that this is his life, they're just showcasing it to us. So it's more like based off what was even being posted prior to this with the baby oil, and it was kind of like, damn, what else this guy was like what like what else he was doing? You know what I'm saying? So hey man, it's on Netflix now. That's like is his life a joke, a show?
SPEAKER_02:Like well, you got we gotta remember too, when when this first happened, the whole him going to jail thing, everybody and their mom made a doc, whether it was Hulu, HBO, everyone has a Diddy doc somewhere as soon as this case came out. Word it was 50 was smart. 50 and that team were smart to wait to see how the case played out before they put theirs out. And they got exclusive content as well. Because his is this one is basically a biography on his life, yeah, and it's and it explains to you how this person got to this part today, and it goes back to his childhood. His mom was a basically a hoe and was around pimps and stuff like that. Yeah, and they had the story of him beating his mom, him hitting his mom, telling her shut up and stuff. Was that true?
unknown:Who knows?
SPEAKER_00:We gotta like fact check. I mean, because not us, but I feel like they have to fact-check all of all of this stuff.
SPEAKER_01:So I think they tried to. I think I saw that. It said on the thing that they tried to contact, but they they're not.
SPEAKER_00:Oh, okay. Yeah, I didn't I didn't see the whole thing, that's why.
SPEAKER_02:They they they reached out for contact and it said that they didn't respond back. But and usually when that happens, it's kind of true. But it explains who he is as a person. If that's what you've seen growing up and stuff like that, it doesn't excuse his actions, but if that's what you see as a child, you think, oh, this is okay. You smack the woman when she gets out of line. Yeah, this is what we're supposed to do. Remember, his pops was a gangster and stuff like that. He he's going to Harlem when he's a kid, seeing other gangsters and stuff like that. So that shapes the way you think. It was the same with R. Kelly. R. Kelly was around a bunch of nasty stuff. My boy. You got Robert. You got touched and stuff like that. Yeah, yeah. But that's why he was messed up as he gets older. So with Diddy, it was kind of similar as being able to go back in time and be like, uh, so you were fucked up a long time ago. From the jump. You've been messed up. And then the drug thing doesn't happen until later. The other this early stuff is just violence. I think the doctor said he broke something. When he broke his wrist or something, he got addicted basically to pain pills. Oh, opioids and so it's like when you addicted to pain pills, and that's why you staying up three, four days in a row. Yeah, they said he had like 17-day uh 14-day benders.
SPEAKER_01:Like you go on that kind of binge. Yeah, you could stay up 14 days. They said he had like 14 days. Not healthy, but you can.
SPEAKER_00:But when you do um he was hallucinating, bro. They say after like five days, bro, of no sleep or whatever, yeah. You start tweaking.
SPEAKER_01:If the 14 days is wrong, do tell us if you're listening to this and you don't know. It is a certain amount of time. I believe I saw I they said maybe four days?
SPEAKER_02:Maybe four and yeah, it was a lot of days because I was like because the four and five was with homeboy that was that he paid the the pop cassie. They would pop pills for like four or five days. So he was like, this was the studio stuff. That's what I'm saying. That's what I'm saying. That's different, right? That's a different thing. That's what I'm saying. They two separate things, and even that stuff is is like you're a little freaky, but there's nothing wrong with you paying somebody else if that's what you want. That's crazy. There's nothing wrong with that. But I think the violent stuff is where a lot of people like the uh the Keefy D part.
SPEAKER_01:Yo, that was um what I feel like he's been.
SPEAKER_00:I feel like he's been like I seen that on like Vlad and but he been said some of some of this stuff, like we already knew.
SPEAKER_02:It's the way it was presented. Like they showed in the doc. This is the second episode, I believe. Yeah, where they show that he paid the money to to Keefy D to get the Crips and stuff to get a million dollars. So they got more in depth. Right. But then they they go to a G Depp song. Cause remember, G Depp is on Bad Boy at the time, and Diddy is rapping on it. And Diddy is rapping, yeah, I put a million on your head to get niggas out the street, and he's talking about Tupac because that's how much he paid Homeboy to kill Pac. Wow. So it's one of those where it was like, wait a minute, hold on. This nigga all records talking about killing Pac and stuff, and we never put two and two together. And they even talked about the big murder, how big didn't want to be in LA, and he was supposed to be in London. In London turned his press tour. Diddy made him stay another day. He canceled everything. Right, he canceled all the stuff, and he made him stay in LA another day, and that's how Diddy ends up getting killed. I mean, I did he ends up getting killed the next day.
unknown:Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:Oh wow. That's a lot to unpack.
SPEAKER_01:You know the celebration of life as well?
SPEAKER_02:That they did at the MTV Awards. Remember when Biggie's mom is there and Diddy comes out in the all-white.
SPEAKER_00:And he's dancing and he's singing a song.
SPEAKER_02:So during that time, he had told the other uh dude that ran Bad Boy with him, like, oh yeah, we're gonna pay for Big's funeral. We're gonna make it the biggest funeral in New York, da da da. And then come to find out, according to the doc, not saying this is true or not, yeah, but according to the doc, he used Biggie's own funds to pay for the I think they just posted something like uh a couple days ago, like the the Biggie um estate, like then like denied those claims.
SPEAKER_00:Like that was like finger something.
SPEAKER_02:And see, that's if the mom was still around, if if Miss Wallace was still around, I would be more inclined to believe that.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, but she not, yeah.
SPEAKER_02:And that could be one of those, hey, we're gonna give y'all some money on the side, just say that, da da da. And some people just admit it and be like, yeah, Diddy, did he didn't do that, da da da da. Especially if I give you 50,000 on the side. Yeah, what biggie estate is getting where they getting that money from? Oh, yeah. You know what I'm saying? Yeah. So if I can get some money out of this, yeah, I'll say he ain't do it. But we don't know though. No, we don't know.
SPEAKER_01:Because even if they they they present it as fact, you still have to have a bit of skepticism.
SPEAKER_02:You gotta draw your own conclusion. Yeah, that's facts. Because like even on the the fourth episode, there are they bring two jurors in that were on the case. The Indian guy, I believe, and the black lady. And the black lady. And it comes to find out this black lady knew Diddy, had pictures with him and all that. And it's coming out on social media now that, oh, you knew Diddy, you were a super fan. So that's why you were saying what you were saying on the doc, that he didn't do nothing and it didn't seem real and all that other stuff. Because you was cool with him. So it's one of those where it's like you're trying to find that balance. Yeah. And I think that's what the doc presents. It's like, these are the this is the information. I I like that part.
SPEAKER_01:I was talking to I was talking to the guys in SOA about that. I like that part, is that they give you everything and they're like, draw your own conclusion from it.
SPEAKER_02:Wow. So yeah, it's on you to decide now with the with the information presented to you, what it is. Yeah, but it explains him and Suge so much more. I didn't know Suge did all of that. Like oh no, Suge, I knew. Suge I knew, but it shows Diddy was just as sinister.
SPEAKER_01:But Suge was Bobby Shore's uh bodyguard?
SPEAKER_02:Yes, at first. At first, but then he transitions into exact like Suge Knight is the one that held vanilla ice over the balcony to get his masters. Like a like Michael Jackson with baby. That's crazy. Imagine that. A grown man picking up another grown man and hanging him over the balcony by their feet, just coins and chewing girls. Yeah, mad sonic rings falling out like that's crazy. Like, that's nuts. And Diddy was arguably more sinister than the dude hanging people over balconies. Yeah, damn.
SPEAKER_00:Shout out to Vanilla Ice, though, man.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah. Did you see any bit of the documentary? Any episode?
SPEAKER_00:Nah, a little bit. I didn't really see much. I don't really see it. Yeah. Check, definitely check it out. Yeah. I saw like a little bit though. Not too far. Like maybe like the first episode or something.
SPEAKER_02:It's it's it's definitely interesting. If you do know some of the facts already, it just gives you a different perspective. I think that's the biggest thing here, is just looking at it with a different set of eyes. Like even the Tupac stuff, they had Tupac cousin on there. They get into the kid Cuddy story where he was about to blow up the car. The Eric Sermon stuff, I had no clue about Eric Sermon. Because his first Diddy's first baby moms was Eric Sermon's girlfriend. And that that was the theme throughout each episode, too. If he seen someone he wanted, and he would try to kill his boyfriend or something. What in the head? He pulled up to Eric Sermon's car and tapped on the glass, like, yo, what we doing? Let's fight. Let's do what we gotta do. Eric Sermon's like, all right, get in. Car, we're gonna go around the corner and fight. And did he got in the car? He went around the corner, yeah.
SPEAKER_01:And instead of fighting, what is wrong with him? He played him a record, yeah. He played him the big album. He did all that to play big big new album.
SPEAKER_02:I think he bipolar.
SPEAKER_00:There's something I think he was on of a 14-day no sleep.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah, this is in the early 90s. Yeah, this is in the early 90s. And he wasn't on med, he wasn't on drugs at that point. So I guess this watching the whole thing, when you do factor in like mental health, prior to the drug stuff, like how much of that is really him? Like, can you can you put a hundred percent blame on him? So the the reason I ask it like that is because it seemed like um Andre Andre Horell and uh what's the other guy's name? The the white guy the uh the he's the um I have no idea. He's like the CEO of one of the big companies. Is it Universal or Sony?
SPEAKER_00:The guy I know I know you I think I know you're Lucian Grange?
SPEAKER_01:No, uh it was Andre Hurrell and someone else. I forgot his name. But I can't remember is is is part of it as well. I think his name is like Lou. Leor?
SPEAKER_02:Leo Corn is is it Leo? Lucy. You know what? Lucian is universal. I know that. Lucian is universal.
SPEAKER_01:And if you guys see us, do just let us know the name or correct anything that we get wrong. But I think from what from what I saw on the dock, he was never actually corrected by anyone. He was just allowed to roam free. And when you've when you've given no There were no consequences for the consequences when you've had no discipline.
SPEAKER_00:I'm thinking it was somebody else.
SPEAKER_01:And then you just keep getting money and money's getting you out of trouble. At what point do you do you actually have like a god complex that it's because of the environment that you were actually raised in? Because think about it.
SPEAKER_00:They say your your your habits create your habitat, yeah.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, and that's what it was for him. He had the the the stampede at City College, where that normally ends a lot of people. Then you get the shine shooting with him and J Lo and all that, where he was the one who really shot the girl in the face and all that, but Shine was the one who did the time.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, wow.
SPEAKER_02:Like, there's a lot of stuff, and it's one of those where you go back and you look at every artist who's been on Bad Boy, either they went to church and had to find God or fell completely off the grid. Like G Depp was so like he went so left of God that he ended up admitting to a murder he did.
unknown:Damn.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, and no one asked him, like he went to the station and was like, Yeah, this was heavy on my heart. I killed this dude back in '90, da da da da da da and all that. Yes. You hear Mark Curry on there talking about it and whatnot. What happened with Aubrey? Like, what happened with Aubrey was crazy. Aubrey, uh yeah. At Aubrey O'Day. That was from Danity King, where she had to sit and hear somebody else tell her about something that was happening to her because she was passed out on the couch. She was drugged in.
SPEAKER_00:They gave her the put a miley on her shit. Yeah, he was on his Bill Cosby time. He was on his Brick Ross.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, Ross said it too. No, but no, but that also makes me wonder because when Ross said that, that's when he was hanging out with Diddy.
SPEAKER_00:Wow. I see. I didn't know that. Oh, we we make a connection.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah.
SPEAKER_00:Wow. Are we the feds?
SPEAKER_02:I don't want to be black. We just put two and two together. No, that's that's funny. That's all it is. We put two. Right. It just that's just a weird coincidence, too. Like that's a crazy thing when Ross says that. Because Ross, he don't have no other bar like that in the beginning of his catalog or after that song. You don't have no kind of Ross bar talking about I put something in her drink and she ain't even know it. That's crazy to say. That is crazy. And that's on the remix track. Like, wait a minute, you freestyling that? Nah.
SPEAKER_00:And the engineers say, you know what?
SPEAKER_02:Keep it. Keep it. Send it out now. This is fire. Keep it. Nah, it's different. If you get a chance, you you should watch it. Yeah. Just I'm gonna check it out tonight. Just the perception of everything. Just even looking at that Tupac part. I look at the Tupac part that should hurt so differently now. That should hurt. Yeah. That's it, because Tupac was messing with one of Diddy girls. Was it a dog? No, that was not a doc. But if if you watch any of the old Tupac.
SPEAKER_00:I don't want I don't want to be around nobody over there. I get a girl, they they gonna you can't even have nobody.
SPEAKER_02:Bro, you can't even have nobody because he wanted.
SPEAKER_00:Mm-hmm. You can't even have nobody.
SPEAKER_02:Or you hope he don't want you. You saw what he did to that little rod, dude.
SPEAKER_00:Oh yeah. Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:Beating the brakes off Lil Rod. So he could get nah fair. Diddy you stay. 50 was right. He used to stay all the way over there. Talking about you want to take me shopping. Hell no. He took a couple people shopping. That's weird. That is weird. Ain't never had no grown man come up to you. Hey, you want to go shopping? Yeah, bro. Buy me whatever I want, bro.
SPEAKER_03:What?
SPEAKER_01:You know what I'm surprised that didn't make the dock? Is this this the interaction of he and Justin Bieber?
SPEAKER_02:I ain't gonna lie. Yeah. He was Justin Bieber was just on the album. So that's probably why you probably ain't hear nothing from him. But Justin Bieber probably been so messed up. Because Diddy was like, You know who I want to hear from?
SPEAKER_01:Diddy was like, we don't hang out no more.
SPEAKER_02:And Justin were 15. I want to hear from Usher.
SPEAKER_00:Oh, yeah, right, right. Or Ursher, yeah.
SPEAKER_02:I want to hear from Usher. Usher is the one. He has the stories. He was the one with Diddy back in '94 with My Way and stuff like that when he was 12. And Usher has talked about seeing orgies and all that kind of stuff. So, like, what was Usher going through before Jermaine Dupree was like, hey, come on, man. Get him out of there. We gotta give him out of there.
SPEAKER_00:Even Mace was like, I'm out of the head, bro.
SPEAKER_02:Think about it. Mace quits rap and goes to be a pastor. What did he see while he was there? That shit is bad. That made him want to be a pastor, yeah. That makes you want to just get away and be like, nah, I can't do this anymore. It's something. That shiny suit, something. Like the locks are the only ones that get away with like they mental and they physical being like strong and still there.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, but you see how the locks, they were, I mean, they're obviously a legendary group, but they never hit like super stardom, though. As the locks, right. As a group. Like super stardom. Like they never hit.
SPEAKER_01:But none of them did on Bad Boy outside of Biggie. I I think I think it's because uh I think if Jadakiss was Jadakiss wasn't sent to uh Bad Boys, it was the locks that were sent to Bad Boys. I think if they were all individually signed to Bad Boys, it would have screwed them. I think no, we could be corrected on that as well. But I they went up in Diddy, it would have been Diddy offensive was gonna throw a fridge at the nigga.
SPEAKER_02:I was gonna throw a fridge at him. Yo, and they were they were well back then. Yeah, but even Diddy taking back his 25% from what was supposed to be his homeboy. That's crazy. So when he starts Bad Boy Records. Oh, yeah, I think I heard that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. He gave 75% to his mom and 25% to him because this is after the city college thing. So if the victims see that he's making money, oh, whatever money you make it from Bad Boy, you're gonna give to the victims. So he put it in other people's names. So he technically still had no money. Nothing. It's kind of smart, kind of shrewd, business-wise. Like putting it under your mom's name or something. Right. It's kind of smart, but eventually, homeboy that owned the 25%, Diddy pulled up on him with a baseball bat and was like, hey, it's time for you to get that back. Now I need that 25. So take that. Take that. Yeah, you see. All about the Benjamins. And that dude got messed up. He he was homeless. He had nothing. And he was a little on the fruity side. So I'm pretty sure Diddy probably, you know.
SPEAKER_00:Damn, that's crazy.
SPEAKER_02:You know, there was Diddy, yeah. And he sued him back in 03, and nobody believed him. Nobody believed him. Everybody was like, yeah, whatever. But it really took for that Cassie video to come out. Because even before the video came out, people is like, yeah, it was just allegations.
SPEAKER_00:Like they were just like, nah, we wouldn't do that.
SPEAKER_02:That's love. Exactly. That's love. That's love. That's for real. That's what he was going by. That's love. Oh nah, he would never do that. And until that video comes out. Damn. He beat the brakes off Cassie. That's that was he kicked her. Yeah, I seen that. I seen the footage. But they said this goes back to him at Howard University. He he beat up a woman back at Howard University when he was a student there. Oh, he's got a little history of just cranking it on women, bro. Back to the childhood and being around pimps and being around hoes. And you see hoes get slapped, and he wants to be the one slapping them. There you go.
SPEAKER_01:It's crazy how it goes. Man, life is life is not a box of chocolate, guys.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, don't slap women, bro.
SPEAKER_01:Please, please keep your hands and yourself.
SPEAKER_00:As a matter of fact, keep your yeah.
SPEAKER_01:Keep your hands and feet to yourself. Growing up, my mom always just said she never specified gender. She just always said, keep your hands to yourself.
SPEAKER_02:You know, keep your hands and feet to yourself, and don't be diddy, please. Don't be just don't be him. Like, don't meet your role models and don't be diddy. Yeah, please. In any facet, not just the women, too. Business. Anything. But his children, all that. Just don't be diddy. Please. Yeah, man.
SPEAKER_01:All right, guys. Well, this is the I almost said the 20 plus podcast. 20 plus. I was like, what? Is it 60? 60 plus the podcast. Yes. Uh, if you guys like what you hear, if you know.
SPEAKER_00:If anything stands out, leave it in the comments. Yes. Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:And tell somebody else. Yeah, tell somebody else. So that they could listen and follow.
SPEAKER_01:And if you have Spotify or Apple Music or Pandora or whatever.
SPEAKER_00:And you want to hear our lovely voices without the visual.
SPEAKER_01:Without the visual.
SPEAKER_00:We're there. We are an audiobook for an episode.
SPEAKER_01:Whatever they give out podcasts are free. Yeah, that's what you find. I don't want to do an audio book. No, we're not doing that. That's too much reading.
SPEAKER_02:He said we're not doing the surprise between the enunciate everything. No, no audiobooks. I'm too bull for that.
SPEAKER_01:Today was a perfect day. You know what?
SPEAKER_02:I'd do an audiobook for a Zane book. I'll do a children's audiobook.
SPEAKER_00:I'd do a children's audiobook. Yeah, if I could do some voices or something like that. I'll do a children's book book. Yeah, I'd do that.
SPEAKER_01:All right, guys. Uh this comes uh this is gonna be our Thursday, then it's gonna be your Friday. Enjoy your weekend, be safe. Uh this is gonna come out the week. Yeah, they don't need to know that. They don't need to know that. It comes out when it comes out on a Thursday.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, so whenever it does come out, it's when it comes out on a Thursday, Thursday. Exactly. Exactly. So you enjoy your Thursday. It's Taco Thursday. Make us a taco. It's not Taco Tuesday no more.
SPEAKER_01:Tequila Thursday.
SPEAKER_02:Tequila Thursday. Taco's the tequila.
SPEAKER_01:Double T's. I'm exhausted. Have a great rest of your weekend, guys. Peace, people. Peace.