The Rufus and Craig Show

Power Rights and Pure Chaos

Rufus and Craig Season 1 Episode 17

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0:00 | 31:38

This episode opens with a sharp political lens, using Kamala Harris’s remarks on Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act to ground the conversation in current legal and civic tensions. From there, it shifts into economic realities, highlighting instability across sectors, from Spirit Airlines’ struggles to a DC public schools attorney working two jobs, alongside alarming claims about job losses among Black women. The discussion also touches on global technology dynamics with China’s AI restrictions, cultural business issues with TI’s catalog, and an absurd but telling case of insurance fraud involving a man staging a bear attack on his own cars. The episode closes on lighter but still chaotic pop culture moments, including a viral TSA incident and a shocking Orleans Parish jail scandal involving a sheriff connected to an inmate escape.

SPEAKER_00

They have been doing the work through for building a supreme court that is configured that we don't have and they're about to make a decision of the voting rights. That will mean that the legal tool that we have to be able to litigate in a court what are clearly racist, influence, laws to prevent certain people from voting, we're gonna lose the tool that we have had before.

SPEAKER_02

Happy Saturday, Rufus. This is your wonderful.

SPEAKER_03

Happy Saturday, good morning. Yeah, wonderful co-host, Craig.

SPEAKER_02

And um, it's happy for us. We're gonna maintain our joy. And what you just heard was the voice of uh former vice president Kamala Harris. Um speaking more so to where we currently are in regards to our voting act and and and voting rights, rather. Um, so Rufus, how are you? Before we get into that, how are you?

SPEAKER_03

I'm good. How are you?

SPEAKER_02

Dorinda Clark Cole says, I'm still here. I'm not gonna sing it. I know earlier we I used to always sing.

SPEAKER_03

I'm still here. I'll sing it for us. That's Tisha Campbell, not Dorinda Clark Cole. Oh, well, you know I don't know no church songs, my bad.

SPEAKER_02

But you knew that.

SPEAKER_03

So you knew it was a church song. That ain't a church song, though. The Tisha Campbell version ain't that ain't churchy, that's just a song, right?

SPEAKER_02

You just identified it as a church song. So you are familiar with the legendary.

SPEAKER_03

You said it's Dorinda Clark. I don't know that girl. I don't know.

SPEAKER_02

You just said, but I don't know church songs.

SPEAKER_03

I know Dorinda Clark sings church songs. I don't know. But there we go.

SPEAKER_02

But we appreciate your your wonderful Tisha Campbell reendition. Um, I hate I never made it to Zen Lounge that was under the highway um in Los Angeles. And they said you would almost cure yourself trying to go to it. You have to cross a highway um to even try to access the the location. But um, hey, maybe she might reopen it. The girl keeps a job.

SPEAKER_03

So she's just like Kiki Palmer. Tisha keep a job, Campbell.

SPEAKER_02

That's it. Welcome to the Rufus and Craig Show, everybody. We're excited to be with you. And again, shout out to all of our listeners in the wonderful country of South Africa. We appreciate you too. Thank you for tuning in. Um Wow, it's been a week um since we last talked, literally. And it's literally been a week. And one thing that I wanted to highlight that um I wish we get more coverage. Um, and it's not to not fear-mongering or to scare anybody necessarily, but we gotta fucking vote people. And what you heard was Kamala saying, and we we see the insight she has, you have to think about it. She's on the inside, she's familiar with those conversations. And while America made the decision to not elect a black woman who assumed, you know, the race, of course, at a later time, um it's a lot. And I ain't read her book. Rufus would be more inclined to pick that book up and read it before me. Um, I kind of like stay in my lane, you know, the self-help lane, the higher ed lane, um, but you know, black history lane. But I'm I'm sure he'll be able to come to us maybe in later episodes and share with us what was actually in her book. Um, but section two of the voting rights acts of 1965, um, the U.S. Supreme Court has made a ruling. And so when you think about section two, it's the main two that's used to challenge voting laws, um, or district maps rather, that discriminate based upon race. And so if you think about your district maps and how they're drawn, um typically people they say it's bipartisan, so it's either gonna be Republican or Democratic. And what we have seen is those larger concentrations of black voters um tend to lean more towards to Democrats in regards to elections. And so what they're pretty much gonna do is redraw the motherfucking maps.

SPEAKER_03

And um And they've already started in Louisiana and Alabama, I think. They canceled, they cut them. I'm sorry, they canceled the upcoming election to redraw the maps.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, so it's it's happening, people. Um, but the beauty of this is you you have to vote. And one thing they always go to, and one thing that I remember Roland Martin saying years ago, and maybe even Boyce Watkins, and actually Charlemagne the God, um we're receiving the backlash of electing a black president not only once, but twice. And so it's very unfortunate, but here we are. So that 2008 election, we're still feeling the heat, the pain um for America coming out in large numbers, and black people getting excited to get behind um President Barack Obama. Um, but we're still feeling in so they're gonna do everything they can to manipulate this vote.

SPEAKER_03

And you know, I hadn't thought of that until you just said it, but that is actually true. Um even the the president we have now is still mad at the black man winning the White House two times. And the whole reason he even ran for president, a lot of people think, is because the then president Barack Obama made fun of him at the White House correspondence dinner in 2000 and I forget the year, but he made fun of him. And I think that's when the wheels started turning for him to actually run for president. Crazy.

SPEAKER_02

Well, his legacy is soiled, and one thing that we always talk about um on our show is really just the impacts of the economy and and and leveraging stories that we see in scroll by every day, and not necessarily tying that to um the economy, but it really just highlight what the fuck is going on in the economy. And speaking of the economy, shout out to uh Michi Builders LLC. Thank you again for sponsoring the show. We appreciate you. Um so getting right into our story. One airline, one of the first airlines that I had taken on my own. I remember I flew out from Dallas. I might have even parked my vehicle um at your time, then Rufus. So we know this is well more than a decade. Um yeah, I flew from Dallas to Boston if you remember that. Um Yeah, yeah, yeah. I think um uh Michi had actually taken me to the airport at that time. But I flew to go see Nikki. She had moved to Boston, and I think that was the first plane ticket that I had bought on my own without my mom doing anything. I had a uh uh what's that that bank? Um, we in MX World now, praise the Lord. But credit one bank at a credit card, and I remember I was like, girl, I'm gonna get up there to see you.

SPEAKER_03

She lived in.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, she was in Boston, and I bought my ticket. Oh, y'all, it might have been under $50 round trip from Penny.

SPEAKER_03

And I think you put me on to where you can go to the counter and buy the ticket, it'll be cheaper.

SPEAKER_02

Penny tickets, absolutely. Penny tickets. You well, Spirit is gone. And that's what we're talking about, everybody. Spirit Airlines, as of this morning, um, has ceased operations. And so one thing that we saw in the media gearing up like within the last what, uh say month or so, is that they were speaking about um they needed this $500,000 and went under different presidents.

SPEAKER_03

$500 million?

SPEAKER_02

$500 million. Thank you, thank you, thank you. Um, they needed those funds to stay afloat. And if you think back to being under, I want to say it could have been the current president in chief. Um, his pre they were bailing these airline companies out, right? So I think you think post-COVID, with COVID, they were bailing them out, getting them these big packages. And I just kept saying, 500 million really isn't a lot of money.

SPEAKER_03

It doesn't seem like enough.

SPEAKER_02

It just, you know, so what was the significance of just 500 million would keep you open or keep, you know, and I just have to sit with that. And unfortunately, we cannot um avoid talking about race. Who's on the spirit flights?

SPEAKER_03

Everybody.

SPEAKER_02

Well, that is true, but if you get on a flight with spirit, and I I've traveled them uh maybe once within the last 12 months, but I'm a frontier guy, so I do do budget carriers. But if you you can't avoid talking about race. So one thing about spirit is if there's a hundred seats on the plane, 80 of them will be black and brown people. And that's reality. And so when we think about that second, what is it, that that is it the Secretary of Transportation who came out talking about decorum and airports and things of that nature?

SPEAKER_03

Yes, it was him.

SPEAKER_02

Spirit has always been the target. And one thing we talk about with Spirit, if you look at the ratings and surveys, Spirit has always been the safest airline over the last what, maybe is it 30 years?

SPEAKER_03

They have never had an incident. And they have the newest fleet of airplanes.

SPEAKER_02

There you go. There you go. So when we think about can $500,000 break them, but one thing I said about it, I said, Well, this is crazy because Allegiant ain't never went down, Sun Country ain't never gone down, so this could have been a lot of the five.

SPEAKER_03

Southwest hasn't either.

SPEAKER_02

Southwest, when we think about those that offer um a lower price airfare, base fare, right? They didn't go down. So why was there no pivot? We're talking about, I mean, $500 million. To me, that's just that's not a lot of money.

SPEAKER_03

It's a lot, but I feel like it's not enough to make them uh remain open for a substantial amount of time. Because the airline industry, the aviation industry is very expensive. Very expensive to operate. I think they were in debt billions of dollars. So $500 million probably wouldn't be nearly enough, and they weren't gonna recoup, you know what I'm saying? I don't see how they can I I can I didn't see the the plan on how they were gonna come out of this ahead. To be honest.

SPEAKER_02

Number one, did you see yo stop taking the salary? You know, I mean it just it just makes sense to me. You know, operate like Sun Country, operate like a Legion. We only flying out on Mondays and we ain't bringing your ass back until Thursday. If you want to go from here to Miami, you know, it it could have been a bigger pivot, right? Um, opposed to just saying, we're done. We're out. And speaking of newer planes, I saw something on Instagram even this morning. Um, like you said, the guy, you know, it's just it's been like a lot of moratoriums to those, um, for those employees. And I think you told me earlier somebody had cried, a flight attendant had cried.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, I was listening to one of the, I think the final flight that landed at DFW, the flight attendant was making an announcement. Was you know, his voice was uh quivering and he was obviously crying, so it's kind of sad. And I feel bad for all my heart goes out to the people that lost their jobs today because everybody, you know, we need people need to work. So just imagine the amount of people that work for Spirit. It's probably way less than it was in whatever they started flying 34 years ago, but people still need the job. So this is gonna affect a lot of people in a lot of different ways.

SPEAKER_02

Yep, yep. And and their statement was, of course, it is with great disappointment that Spirit Airlines has started winding down its global operations effective immediately. All flights have been canceled, and custom service is no longer available. While we are not able to help you rebook flight on another airline, we will automatically process refunds for any flights purchased through Spirit with a credit card or debit card to the original form of payment. We are proud of the impact of our ultra-low cost model on the industry for the last 33 years and at hope to serve our guests for many years to come. And so those of you who have um had a spirit flight, they did give a website and it's spiritrestructuring.com. So um, yeah, yeah, yeah. Interesting times, you know, and they were the interesting times.

SPEAKER_03

They were the pioneering airline of ultra low-cost carriers here in the U.S., if y'all didn't know that.

SPEAKER_02

I'm I'm with it. I remember getting on that plane for whatever, it was like gray. And I was like, wow, this is the Titanic on the sky. I remember, you know, having lived in the it was it was a huge ass airplane. I think it was like it could have just been three on three.

SPEAKER_03

It was an Airbus uh narrowbody.

SPEAKER_02

It was huge, and I was because you know, being if you live in in in states that I've lived in, like Arkansas, um Mississippi, um, Alabama, ain't no big Airbus or Big Boeing. You might get a 737 Southwest, but that plane was huge, and I was like, oh, we're just powed on here.

SPEAKER_03

And I was just Well, you do know a 737 and an Airbus 321 are nearly the same.

SPEAKER_02

This one was big. I just remember it wasn't a crop dust, it wasn't no two by three.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, I got it.

SPEAKER_02

It was just a huge play. It wasn't a 717. And I was like, wow, you know. Um, but we we got on there, got to Boston, got back, and that was my first interaction with Spears. So, you know, um things may turn around. It's closed as of today. Um, things may turn around, but again, another loss, another loss, and I know a lot of what they ruled it to was fuel costs, is what they're saying. But you know, yeah, yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_03

I I see uh I'm just looking forward. I see a um maybe an opening for another airline. I think there's a new airline called Breeze Airlines that was founded by the same founder as Jet Blue. I think there's an opportunity there.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, yeah, on the East Coast. And and I was speaking earlier, like that guy posted they had a new fleet, like it was newer planes, right?

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, they're smaller though, but yeah, they're it's a new airline.

SPEAKER_02

Oh no, I mean Spirit, excuse me. Spirit.

SPEAKER_03

Oh, yeah, Spirit had Spirit had the new fleet.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, man. So where does that where does that go? What does that look like? So um that's the answer today. And I think sometimes this person, the chief administrator, lets the bottom fall out because he likes to come in and say that he is the savior. So um, but but don't take race out of it. I say I've if you look at it, more non-black people um as I've seen on flights fly frontier opposed to spirit. We on spirit, you know. Um, but we ain't necessarily on the planes with otters and beavers and fish, and they don't have dolphins, but you know, they go over there, and what I've seen, just my observation, um, and we have gone to the the big yellow bird that makes it happen.

SPEAKER_03

The banana in the sky.

SPEAKER_02

Hey, so shout out to Spirit. I'm I'm I'm I'm sure to turn around with this thing that's up there. He'll we gave him a balloon package. You know, they asked for 500 million, we gave him 650 million. He just wants to be everywhere, just like his ass is on those passports.

SPEAKER_03

He has a God complex, and that passport thing is fucking ridiculous. Like, why would I want his ugly ass face on my passport? I would probably wait until they start making new passports in order to get one.

SPEAKER_02

Yep, I think that's a good one.

SPEAKER_03

Unless it's optional.

SPEAKER_02

It's something about the next, it's a special edition passport. He'll be on the next 25 or 35,000 um passports, I guess that they will produce. But those people up in the mountains, those I remember being in New York um around this election time, um, and they were in droves saying, make America great again. So maybe those bozos will go and get this special edition passport to live with this criminal.

SPEAKER_03

I'm so glad mine is good for another five or six years.

SPEAKER_02

That's it. He will be long gone. Okay, moving right along, um, to something more lighthearted. We talk about the economic impact here, and so shout out to everybody that works more than one job. You know, you got your main gig, you got other hustles along the way. Yeah, yeah, it makes a difference in what we do. So, one person who is feeling the pain of that is the DC Public Schools attorney. And what has happened is it's been revealed, her records have shown that she has worked full-time at her um her job uh as the deputy general counsel for labor and employment at the school system central office, whose hours are 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Um, but she's also been at the Montgomery College. Um, and and her name is um it's Collins. It's her Lynette. So I know. Lynette Collins. Um I know her. I'm sure you do. So Lynette has been teaching a general psychology course this past spring semester. No, no, no. No, not only this past spring semester. Uh she's been teaching psychology 100 in person from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays in the commuter campus of Tacoma Park. And so Montgomery College's spokesman, Marcus Rosanna, did confirm in an email that the school does employ her as an adjunct member. Um so he did go further to say, well, you know, if you're a full-time um faculty person, of course, you have to report out additional employment. But oh, Miss Collins, Miss Collins, Miss Collins, she got it, she got it.

SPEAKER_03

Snap, snap, let me make sure I'm hearing you right. She's a she's working for the main job as a lawyer somewhere.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, she's general counsel for DC public schools.

SPEAKER_03

And Montgomery, is that is that a suburb of DC somewhere? Or is that the Montgomery I'm thinking of in Alabama?

SPEAKER_02

No, no, no, no, no, no. It's the American community college system.

SPEAKER_03

Okay, yeah, yeah. Well, you know, I aspire to be an adjunct professor myself, so maybe she can show me the ropes.

SPEAKER_02

You don't want to follow the Nick because her ass losing jobs. So no, we don't want her getting called out. She ain't, you know, to your point, you would think online, right? In 2026. Lynette, why you take that job, girl? Why was it worth that?

SPEAKER_03

Well, is there anything that's saying that she couldn't take it?

SPEAKER_02

I mean, is I mean I'm unsure, but one thing I would tell you that one class wasn't more than $3,500.

SPEAKER_03

Probably not.

SPEAKER_02

So was it worth it? What is it? So let's let's but we'll put a pen in that and we'll follow up next week to see what the pay is. I'll take it upon myself to do that. And also, we'll look up Lynette's government salary to see. Was it worth it, Lynette? Was it worth it? So we'll we'll we'll spend a block on Lynette. Now, aside from that, I'm I'm I'm sure Lynette is a black woman. And over the last eight years.

SPEAKER_03

Based on her name.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, Lynette, Lynette, and Lynette, but I've seen white girls named Keisha. Uh, we're gonna go right over to our partner on Instagram to have her explain, you know, what is really happening with black women and losing jobs, man. It's just very unfortunate. We've talked about this before, but let's we're we're going on over here um to Edwina, voice of AI, on Instagram.

SPEAKER_01

A thousand black women just lost their jobs this year, and nobody at the top is calling it for what it is. Give me 60 seconds. This one is diabolical. It's just the economy slowing down. Companies are saying that they need to restructure. Let me tell you what they want. Black women are full of light, suicide built on their profile, identity, and a little bit of identically lost all the corporate ladder was never built for black women, you spent your whole career climbing a structure built on a line, twice the work to protect it. And look at this the first one when the music stops that's not a glitch, that's the design. Here's my message stop climbing it. Build something they can't fire you from. Knowledge becomes a product, experience becomes income. I'm showing up all righty.

SPEAKER_02

So we're not gonna do too much more advertisement for her in particular, but one thing they're telling black women who are in this particular situation is lean into your entrepreneurial bag, lean into that bag and and and and avoid the corporate structure as much as possible. And we know this is not coincidental. Um, we've always known that those that are you know in the field working, black women have been the most educated. And I remember my mama saying, man, this was years ago, you know, my mom is a member of Zeta Fibada Sorority Incorporated. So shout out to all of those ladies in blue and white. It might be royal blue and white, not sure, whatever. Um, that a lot of Zetas are in corporate position leadership roles. And I remember that at that point, that conversation might have been more than 20 years ago. So we can see how this particular administration is dismantling and making sure that none of that shit happens. Um, and it's just it's it's unfortunate, but this is just where we are. And one thing you heard Arduina, the voice of AI, um, pretty much kind of alluded to is really just AI. She did mention AI wiping a lot of white-collar drives, and I see it in my field of work. Um so yeah.

SPEAKER_03

So that was AI speaking?

SPEAKER_02

No, no, no. She wasn't. She's okay. So her platform is how can I show you how to use AI to make money? Yeah, I cut off the advertisement at the end because that's what she was gonna say. You know, DM me and I can show you how to make money with AI.

SPEAKER_03

I don't disagree with um people promoting their entrepreneurship, but people have to realize that everybody can't be an entrepreneur. That's my only caveat, I guess, with that.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah. Not in disagreement with that. And and speaking of AI, and one thing that is different, China said, hell no, we won't go. Hell no, we won't go. And so what's recently been reported is that China has made it illegal to replace human workers with AI to cut.

SPEAKER_03

I love that. I saw that today. I think that's great.

SPEAKER_02

Yep. So it said a court in China has ruled that companies can't just fire workers because they want to replace them with AI to save money. And so this particular case involved a tech company that automated an employee's role and tried to move him into a lower paying position and then fired him after he refused. And so the court said that the company's decision was unlawful because adopting AI is a business choice, not an automatic legal excuse to terminate someone. So the ruling pretty much makes it clear that when companies bring in automation, they still have to treat workers fairly. And you know, that can mean offering a proper reassignment, any retraining, or any other reasonable options instead of simply pushing folks out. And so um, you know, I wish they could be adopted here, but as I look in in Rufus's face, we already Know these motherfuckers is about the dollars over here.

SPEAKER_03

So good on China for recognizing that. And I don't I don't think it'll ever happen here because we're too greedy, like you just said. We have too much greed. All these companies care about is making money. They don't care about the human element. You know, even the government is it's money. Like money is the main motivator. Nobody cares about humanity. Um, I think I always say this. I think AI is scary. Like, I am nervous and afraid for the world, not only this country, but the world because of the advent of AI. AI has, I mean, like, it's ridiculous. Like, everything is not real. Nothing is believable. AI is making YouTube videos, AI is making music. AI isn't everything. Some of it, it can be a tool, but I don't think we should be using it to do every fucking thing. We have brains and we can think for ourselves. And we need to, I think we need to stop relying on it for every single thing. We're lazy. That's the fucking problem. We're lazy.

unknown

Yeah. Yeah.

SPEAKER_03

And I'm off my soapbox.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, and one person that we know we talk about the economy all the time, and he has popped up. Ooh, this might be the third time. Okay. No. As far as the economy. T. I. And we know TI and Tiny ain't afraid to take their ass to court. They understand that you can sue these companies and get your money. So in the headlines this week, um, definitely as of April the 27th, T.I. is suing um, you know, a company that really bought his catalog and he wants $52 million to sell it back. And so um this court, this case, excuse me, not this court, this case was filed April 27th, 2026 in Los Angeles. Um, and the lawsuit accuses Sink of breaching a 2017 agreement tied to the Rapper's Atlantic Area era catalog. And at the center of dispute is a buyback option that Grand Hustle claims it properly exercised in September 2024. According to the complaint, the deal has required the price to be calculated using a set formula of pretty much 12 times multiple of catalog net profits, which should have landed between $2.4 million and $3 million. However, TI side has alleged that Sync delayed providing the number for months and ultimately demanded nearly $52 million, a figure that they have argued disregards the agreed upon formula. So uh for the most part, he's trying to get his music back, trying to get his ownership back, and it should only cost, you know, up towards most $3 million. But these folks are saying, uh-uh-uh, you're gonna give us the $52 million. Rufus, what are your thoughts?

SPEAKER_03

I hope he gets his money or his music or whatever he's trying to get. Yeah. I hope he gets it. Um I'll, you know, I'll I'm uh not necessarily a fan, but I enjoy TI. I enjoy T.I.'s music, so I hope he gets it.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, yeah, me too. And I'm I'm I'm sure it it they be winning them cases. Now, Tian, they take their ass out there to LA, and they be winning them cases. So um if all things constant goes with what they've done in the past, they'll definitely win this one too. And and to end our economy segment on a lighter note, whoo! When I saw this, I fucking hollered. It says a California man has dressed up in a bear suit and attacked his own cars to collect insurance money.

SPEAKER_03

What? He attacked his own cars.

SPEAKER_02

Absolutely, he sure did. He has dressed in a bear costume and he has staged fake attacks inside a Rolls Royce and two Mercedes, and then he submitted fraudulent claims seeking nearly $142,000 in insurance and payouts.

SPEAKER_03

And how did his dumb ass get caught?

SPEAKER_02

Well, I I guess they saw it on video. The shit was standing up on his hinds legs, and it really did not, you know. Um it just did, you know, they were like, that's not a real bear. Um and yeah, Sultan Matter Expert said that's not a bear that's attacking these these vehicles. And so um, yeah.

SPEAKER_03

The shit people do for money.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_03

So uh he could have just paid Pookie and Ray Ray and them to go set that shit on fire. Correct. Down in down at the bottom of the bridge somewhere.

SPEAKER_02

Correct, correct, correct. Woo! And you know, just shifted over to our pop culture segment as we uh begin to wind down with the show today, you all. You know, I I have been in airplanes, oh my god, all this past week. Um, to get out of one as of early as Friday morning around 1 a.m. And on my connection from Charlotte back to the well, it's great to somebody, the wonderful city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

SPEAKER_03

The city of brotherly love.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, I was seeing these people with beer. You know, Charlotte Airport, if you have ever had a connection in Charlotte Airport, you all, it's it it can be something intense. I so for me, I got on an earlier flight opposed to waiting in said airport uh in Texas. Shout out to the wonderful Rufus. Um and I just said I was.

SPEAKER_03

Shout out to me? What are you saying?

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, because Texas gets it right with some things. Texas gets it right once with some things.

SPEAKER_03

With most.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah. So all things constant. And I was looking, I was like, damn, all these people are drinking beer. They're drinking beer. And so I might have been on the phone with you, Rufus. No, I think I was on the phone with KJ.

SPEAKER_03

It wasn't me.

SPEAKER_02

And I was like, this man, I was like, I said to myself, uh, they gonna let him get on the plane with beer? You know, he had like a, it was in a little plastic cup. And so the the agent at the desk is like, no, you need to kind of go finish that. So I see him motioning him to go away. And within, you know, two to three minutes, he had come back to actually board the flight without the beer in his hand. But I bring this up to say I saw this video um of a black chick down in half a bottle of dumb.

SPEAKER_03

Oh my god, I saw that shit too.

SPEAKER_02

Before getting on her flight to um well, we don't know what the hell she was.

SPEAKER_03

I don't know what she was in Vegas.

SPEAKER_02

Where they told her ass, baby, you can't get on this plane with that. And so she drank.

SPEAKER_03

I'm not letting my alcohol go to work. Yeah, baby.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, she drank it. So, you know, shout out to whoever the camera person that found that, you know, shout out to them. And I I don't drink on the ground for the whole thing.

SPEAKER_03

I wonder if she made it onto the plane, because in my experience, I've seen people get denied a lot for on one particular airline at least, get denied for smelling like alcohol, whatever, all kinds of shit. So I wonder if she actually made it on the plane. Well, I'm curious.

SPEAKER_02

We'll have to check the comments because there's a camera somewhere and everybody's watching.

SPEAKER_03

Oh, in the airport, there's cameras everywhere.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_03

Believe me when I tell you, they can see everything.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, so be very careful, you all use a privacy screen protect us. Orleans Paris Sheriff Susan Hudson has been indicted in connection with the jailbreak of those 10 prisoners that were given.

SPEAKER_03

Now, wait a minute.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_03

Go ahead, keep going, because I'm interested in this.

SPEAKER_02

No, it's just the Orleans Paris Sheriff as in New Orleans, Louisiana. Uh-huh. Has been indicted in connection with a jailbreak that pretty much had those people running out. Remember last year.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, like with all those, it was like five black men or something, wasn't it? And they was looking for one of them for like months.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, he was over in Atlanta and got caught. Yeah. So uh Cheryl Hudson, she was charged with a 30-count indictment brought forward by Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrell.

SPEAKER_03

Bitch, you need your ass with. I'm sorry. I'm sorry, go ahead.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, yeah, you're fine. She's facing uh malefice of the office, conspiracy to commit malfeasance. Was it malfeasance in office? Okay, thank you. Thank you, thank you for that. And it says feeling or maintaining false public records, conspiracy to commit fouling. I'm saying feeling. Ooh, it's early in the the words are small. Fouling uh maintaining false public records. She has um obstruction of justice and conspiracy to commit obstruction of justice. And so Lee is your ass going to jail, but a bond was set to $300,000. So that means she just needs to come up with 30,000 cash or something.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, it's 10%. But bitch, you the motherfucking sheriff, that means you're a charge of the goddamn county or the jail or whatever. And your dumb ass is helping these people get out.

SPEAKER_02

Well, she's been bonded out, so uh Hudson Du Bella.

SPEAKER_03

Miss Hudson, why would you why would you do this? Why the fuck would you do this, bitch?

SPEAKER_02

She's out of there. And I and I think she needs to have her dumb ass out there.

SPEAKER_03

She's a she's a dumb fucking. I don't know. She needs to get out of there. She must have been fucking one of them.

SPEAKER_02

Hudson is out. Well, I you know what? She's giving me stud advice. Let me show you her. She uh Hudson is out. Look at Hudson. I don't well, you know what? This is Hudson.

SPEAKER_03

I oh, she do look like a little stud.

SPEAKER_02

A stud version of Lisa Ray with locks. Yeah.

SPEAKER_03

Well, girl, I mean Hudson, it was money.

SPEAKER_02

It's money. Economy. We can talk about it.

SPEAKER_03

From where though? Where's she getting the money from? Because them niggas ain't got none.

SPEAKER_02

No, they do. I've worked in a prison and I re as a uh an instructor, and one thing they'll be on their cell phones buying houses while we had class going on.

SPEAKER_03

Where they get money from in jail.

SPEAKER_02

They have money outside of jail, right? Of course they don't have it in the jail, but they still have access to whatever funds they had outside. So I remember an instructor reporting, you know, actually she was recording, she was like, you know, they'll be in the the class I'm trying to teach, and he'd be like, Hold on one second, I'm trying to buy this house.

SPEAKER_03

So just say, okay, nod my head.

SPEAKER_02

Right, because your ass wants to make it back up out of there.

SPEAKER_03

I ain't never been to jail, and I don't plan on going.

SPEAKER_02

So yeah, interesting times. But we'll end it on this. Shout out to everybody. We appreciate you giving us another try week after week. Bye, Rufus.

SPEAKER_03

Bye.